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Functional Characterization of LIPA (Lysosomal Acid Lipase) Variants Associated With Coronary Artery Disease.

Citation
Evans, T. D., et al. “Functional Characterization Of Lipa (Lysosomal Acid Lipase) Variants Associated With Coronary Artery Disease.”. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, And Vascular Biology, pp. 2480-2491.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Trent D Evans, Xiangyu Zhang, Reece E Clark, Arturo Alisio, Eric Song, Hanrui Zhang, Muredach P Reilly, Nathan O Stitziel, Babak Razani
Keywords atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease, human genetics, monocytes, risk
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: LIPA (lysosomal acid lipase) mediates cholesteryl ester hydrolysis, and patients with rare loss-of-function mutations develop hypercholesterolemia and severe disease. Genome-wide association studies of coronary artery disease have identified several tightly linked, common intronic risk variants in which unexpectedly associate with increased mRNA expression. However, an exonic variant (rs1051338 resulting in T16P) in linkage with intronic variants lies in the signal peptide region and putatively disrupts trafficking. We sought to functionally investigate the net impact of this locus on LIPA and whether rs1051338 could disrupt LIPA processing and function to explain coronary artery disease risk. Approach and Results: In monocytes isolated from a large cohort of healthy individuals, we demonstrate both exonic and intronic risk variants are associated with increased LIPA enzyme activity coincident with the increased transcript levels. To functionally isolate the impact of rs1051338, we studied several in vitro overexpression systems and consistently observed no differences in LIPA expression, processing, activity, or secretion. Further, we characterized a second common exonic coding variant (rs1051339), which is predicted to alter LIPA signal peptide cleavage similarly to rs1051338, yet is not linked to intronic variants. rs1051339 also does not impact LIPA function in vitro and confers no coronary artery disease risk.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that common LIPA exonic variants in the signal peptide are of minimal functional significance and suggest coronary artery disease risk is instead associated with increased LIPA function linked to intronic variants. Understanding the mechanisms and cell-specific contexts of LIPA function in the plaque is necessary to understand its association with cardiovascular risk.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology
Volume
39
Issue
12
Number of Pages
2480-2491
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1524-4636
DOI
10.1161/ATVBAHA.119.313443
Alternate Journal
Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol.
PMID
31645127
PMCID
PMC7050600
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