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1.
The molecular basis of familial chylomicronemia (type I hyperlipoproteinemia), a rare autosomal recessive trait, was investigated in six unrelated individuals (five of Spanish descent and one of Northern European extraction). DNA amplification by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis allowed rapid identification of the underlying mutations. Six different mutant alleles (three of which are previously undescribed) of the gene encoding lipoprotein lipase (LPL) were discovered in the five LPL-deficient patients. These included an 11 bp deletion in exon 2, and five missense mutations: Trp 86 Arg (exon 3), His 136 Arg (exon 4), Gly 188 Glu (exon 5), Ile 194 Thr (exon 5), and Ile 205 Ser (exon 5). The Trp 86 Arg mutation is the only known missense mutation in exon 3. The other missense mutations lie in the highly conserved "central homology region" in close proximity with the catalytic site of LPL. These and other previously reported missense mutations provide insight into structure/function relationships in the lipase family. The missense mutations point to the important role of particular highly conserved helices and beta-strands in proper folding of the LPL molecule, and of certain connecting loops in the catalytic process. A nonsense mutation (Arg 19 Term) in the gene encoding apolipoprotein C-II (apoC-II), the cofactor of LPL, was found to underlie chylomicronemia in the sixth patient who had normal LPL but was apoC-II-deficient.  相似文献   

2.
We have previously reported two common lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene mutations underlying LPL deficiency in the majority of 37 French Canadians (Monsalve et al., 1990. J. Clin. Invest. 86: 728-734; Ma et al., 1991. N. Engl. J. Med. 324: 1761-1766). By examining the 10 coding exons of the LPL gene in another French Canadian patient, we have identified a third missense mutation that is found in two of the three remaining patients for whom mutations are undefined. This is a G to A transition in exon 6 that results in a substitution of asparagine for aspartic acid at residue 250. Using in vitro site-directed mutagenesis, we have confirmed that this mutation causes a catalytically defective LPL protein. In addition, the Asp250----Asn mutation was also found on the same haplotype in an LPL-deficient patient of Dutch ancestry, suggesting a common origin. This mutation alters a TaqI restriction site in exon 6 and will allow for rapid screening in patients with LPL deficiency.  相似文献   

3.
We studied the molecular basis of familial Type I hyperlipoproteinemia in two brothers of Turkish descent who had normal plasma apolipoprotein C-II levels and undetectable plasma post-heparin lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity. We cloned the cDNAs of LPL mRNA from adipose tissue biopsies obtained from these individuals by the polymerase chain reaction and directional cloning into M13 vectors. Direct sequencing of pools of greater than 2000 cDNA clones indicates that their LPL mRNA contains two mutations: a missense mutation changing codon 156 from GAU to GGU predicting an Asp156----Gly substitution and a nonsense mutation changing the codon for Ser447 from UCA to UGA, a stop codon, predicting a truncated LPL protein that contains 446 instead of 448 amino acid residues. Both patients were homozygous for both mutations. Analysis of genomic DNAs of the patients and their family members by the polymerase chain reaction, restriction enzyme digestion (the GAT----GGT mutation abolishes a TaqI restriction site), and allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization confirms that the patients were homozygous for these mutations at the chromosomal level, and the clinically unaffected parents and sibling were true obligate heterozygotes for both mutations. In order to examine the functional significance of the mutations in this family, we expressed wild type and mutant LPLs in vitro using a eukaryotic expression vector. Five types of LPL proteins were produced in COS cells by transient transfection: (i) wild type LPL, (ii) Asp156----Gly mutant, (iii) Ser447----Ter mutant, (iv) Gly448----Ter mutant, and (v) Asp156----Gly/Ser447----Ter double mutant. Both LPL immunoreactive mass and enzyme activity were determined in the culture media and intracellularly. Immunoreactive LPLs were produced in all cases. The mutant LPLs, Asp156----Gly and Asp156----Gly/Ser447----Ter, were devoid of enzyme activity, indicating that the Asp156----Gly mutation is the underlying defect for the LPL deficiency in the two patients. The two mutant LPLs missing a single residue (Gly448) or a dipeptide (Ser447-Gly448) from its carboxyl terminus had normal enzyme activity. Thus, despite its conservation among all mammalian LPLs examined to date, the carboxyl terminus of LPL is not essential for enzyme activity. We further screened 224 unrelated normal Caucasians for the Ser447----Ter mutation and found 36 individuals who were heterozygous and one individual who was homozygous for this mutation, indicating that it is a sequence polymorphism of no functional significance. Human LPL shows high homology to hepatic triglyceride lipase and pancreatic lipase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene of a 2-year-old patient presenting classical features of the familial LPL deficiency including undetectable LPL activity. DNA sequence analysis of exon 5 identified the patient as a homozygote for the Gly188Glu mutation, frequently involved in this disease. A review of cases of LPL deficiency with molecular study of the LPL gene showed a total number of 221 reported mutations involved in this disease. Gly188Glu was involved in 23.5 % of cases and 74.6 % of mutations were clustered in exons 5 and 6. Based on these observations, we propose a method of screening for mutations in this gene.  相似文献   

5.
Citrullinemia is an autosomal recessive disease caused by deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase. In order to characterize mutations, RNA was isolated from cultured fibroblasts from 13 unrelated patients with neonatal citrullinemia. Ten mutations were identified by sequencing of amplified cDNA. Seven single base missense mutations were identified: Gly14----Ser, Ser180----Asn, Arg157----His, Arg304----Trp, Gly324----Ser, Arg363----Trp, and Gly390----Arg. Six of these missense mutations involved conversion of a CpG dinucleotide in the sense strand to TpG or CpA, and six of the seven mutations alter a restriction enzyme site in the cDNA. Two mutations were observed in which the sequences encoded by a single exon (exon 7 or 13) were absent from the cDNA. One mutation is a G----C substitution in the last position of intron 15 resulting in splicing to a cryptic splice site within exon 16. There is extreme heterogeneity of mutations causing citrulinemia. This heterogeneity may prove typical for less common autosomal recessive human genetic diseases.  相似文献   

6.
F Faustinella  L C Smith  L Chan 《Biochemistry》1992,31(32):7219-7223
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL), hepatic lipase, and pancreatic lipase show high sequence homology to one another. The crystal structure of pancreatic lipase suggests that it contains a trypsin-like Asp-His-Ser catalytic triad at the active center, which is shielded by a disulfide bridge-bounded surface loop that must be repositioned before the substrate can gain access to the catalytic residues. By sequence alignment, the homologous catalytic triad in LPL corresponds to Asp156-His241-Ser132, absolutely conserved residues, and the homologous surface loop to residues 217-238, a poorly conserved region. To verify these assignments, we expressed in vitro wild-type LPL and mutant LPLs having single amino acid mutations involving residue Asp156 (to His, Ser, Asn, Ala, Glu, or Gly), His241 (to Asn, Ala, Arg, Gln, or Trp), or Ser132 (to Gly, Ala, Thu, or Asp) individually. All 15 mutant LPLs were totally devoid of enzyme activity, while wild-type LPL and other mutant LPLs containing substitutions in other positions were fully active. We further replaced the 22-residue LPL loop which shields the catalytic center either partially (replacing 6 of 22 residues) or completely with the corresponding hepatic lipase loop. The partial loop-replacement chimeric LPL was found to be fully active, and the complete loop-replacement mutant had approximately 60% activity, although the primary sequence of the hepatic lipase loop is quite different. In contrast, replacement with the pancreatic lipase loop completely inactivated the enzyme. Our results are consistent with Asp156-His241-Ser132 being the catalytic triad in lipoprotein lipase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Missense mutations in exon 5 of the LPL gene are the most common reported cause of LPL deficiency. Exon 5 is also the region with the strongest homology to pancreatic and hepatic lipase, and is conserved in LPL from different species. Mutant LPL proteins from post-heparin plasma from patients homozygous for missense mutations at amino acid positions 176, 188, 194, 205, and 207, and from COS cells transiently transfected with the corresponding cDNAs were quantified and characterized, in an attempt to determine which aspect of enzyme function was affected by each specific mutation. All but one of the mutant proteins were present, mainly as partially denatured LPL monomer, rendering further detailed assessment of their catalytic activity, affinity to heparin, and binding to lipoprotein particles difficult. However, the fresh unstable Gly(188)-->Glu LPL and the stable Ile(194)-->Thr LPL, although in native conformation, did not express lipase activity. It is proposed that many of the exon 5 mutant proteins are unable to achieve or maintain native dimer conformation, and that the Ile(194)-->Thr substitution interferes with access of lipid substrate to the catalytic pocket. These results stress the importance of conformational evaluation of mutant LPL. Absence of catalytic activity does not necessarily imply that the substituted amino acid plays a specific direct role in catalysis.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVES: In severe type IV hypertriglyceridemia (triglyceride levels >10 g/l), it is yet unknown whether lipoprotein lipase (LPL) differs according to the presence or not of diabetes. METHODS: We compared LPL activity and the presence of four common variants in the LPL gene (Asp 9 Asn (exon 2), Gly 188 Glu (exon 5), Asn 291 Ser (exon 6) and Ser 447 Ter (exon 9)) in a group of 34 patients of whom 17 presented diabetes mellitus. RESULTS: Maximum triglyceride, cholesterol levels and distribution of apolipoprotein E phenotypes did not differ between the two subgroups. Mean post-heparin LPL activity was lower in non-diabetic compared to diabetic patients (9.74 vs. 12.98 micromol FFA/ml/h, p=0.033). Four patients were carrying a mutation in exon 9 (1 non-diabetic), 6 patients in exon 2 (4 non-diabetic) and 1 patient in the non-diabetic subgroup in exon 5. All mutations were at the heterozygous state. CONCLUSION: We found that LPL activity was lower in type IV hyperlipidemia in the absence of diabetes. Genetic defects in the LPL gene that could lead to this lower LPL tended to be more frequently observed in patients without diabetes. These data suggest that the pathomechanisms which contribute to severe type IV hyperlipidemia are different according to the presence or not of diabetes.  相似文献   

9.
Here we report on the molecular defect that leads to a deficiency of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity in a proband of Dutch descent. Southern-blot analysis of the LPL gene from the patient did not reveal any major DNA rearrangements. Sequencing of polymerase-chain-reaction-amplified DNA revealed that the proband is a homozygote for G725C, resulting in a substitution of Pro157 for Arg. This substitution alters a restriction site for PvuII, which allowed rapid identification of the mutant allele in family members. Site-directed mutagenesis and transient expression of the mutant LPL in COS cells produced an enzymatically inactive protein, establishing the functional significance of this mutation. This naturally occurring mutation which alters the Pro157 adjacent to Asp156 of the proposed catalytic triad, indicates that this region of the protein is indeed crucial for LPL catalytic activity.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated a patient of English ancestry with familial chylomicronemia caused by lipoprotein lipase (LPL) deficiency. DNA sequence analysis of all exons and intron-exon boundaries of the LPL gene identified two single-base mutations, a T----C transition for codon 86 (TGG) at nucleotide 511, resulting in a Trp86----Arg substitution, and a C----T transition at nucleotide 571, involving the codon CAG encoding Gln106 and producing Gln106----Stop, a mutation described by Emi et al. The functional significance of the two mutations was confirmed by in vitro expression and enzyme activity assays of the mutant LPL. Linkage analysis established that the patient is a compound heterozygote for the two mutations. The Trp86----Arg mutation in exon 3 is the first natural mutation identified outside exons 4-6, which encompass the catalytic triad residues.  相似文献   

11.
Major structural rearrangements are uncommon causes of mutation in human genetic diseases. We have previously described that a significant proportion of unrelated patients of western European descent who are deficient in lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity have a major structural rearrangement in the LPL gene. Here we report the detailed characterization of this mutation. We show that this rearrangement is due to a duplication of approximately 2 kb which results from juxtaposition of intron 6 to a partially duplicated exon 6. We have sequenced both the junction fragment of this duplication and the corresponding wild-type regions and have found that the breakpoint in intron 6 is associated with the simple repeat found at the 3' end of an Alu element. The breakpoint within exon 6 shows no homology to this simple repeat. This result both suggests that this interchange arose as a nonhomologous recombination event and shows that such events resulting in duplication which occur in normal gene evolution may also lead to genetic disease. Cloning of the junction fragment has allowed synthesis of appropriate primers for rapid screening for this rearrangement in other families with LPL deficiency.  相似文献   

12.
The molecular defects resulting in a deficiency of lipoprotein lipase activity in a patient with the familial hyperchylomicronemia syndrome have been identified. Increased lipoprotein lipase mass but undetectable lipoprotein lipase activity in the patient's post-heparin plasma indicate the presence of an inactive enzyme. No major gene rearrangements were identified by Southern blot analysis of the patient's lipoprotein lipase gene and Northern blot hybridization revealed an lipoprotein lipase mRNA of normal size. Sequence analysis of polymerase chain reaction-amplified lipoprotein lipase cDNA identified two separate allelic mutations. A T to C transition at nucleotide 836 results in the substitution of Ile194, located near the putative interfacial recognition site of lipoprotein lipase, to a Thr. A G to A mutation at base 983 leads to the substitution of a His for Arg243 and the loss of a HhaI restriction enzyme site. Arg243 is near His241, which has been postulated to be part of the catalytic triad of lipoprotein lipase. Direct sequencing of amplified cDNA and digestion with HhaI established that the proband is a compound heterozygote for each base substitution. Transient expression of each of the mutant lipoprotein lipase cDNAs in human embryonal kidney-293 cells resulted in the synthesis of enzymically inactive proteins, establishing the functional significance of the mutations. We conclude that the Ile194 to Thr194 and Arg243 to His243 substitutions occur in lipoprotein lipase regions essential for normal enzyme activity and each mutation results in the expression of a nonfunctional enzyme leading to the hyperchylomicronemia syndrome manifested in the proband.  相似文献   

13.
Uniparental disomy (UPD)-the inheritance of two homologous chromosomes from a single parent-may be unmasked in humans by the unexpected appearance of developmental abnormalities, genetic disorders resulting from genomic imprinting, or recessive traits. Here we report a female patient with familial chylomicronemia resulting from complete lipoprotein-lipase (LPL) deficiency due to homozygosity for a frameshift mutation in exon 2 of the LPL gene. She was the normal term product of an unremarkable pregnancy and had shown normal development until her current age of 5.5 years. The father (age 33 years) and the mother (age 24 years) were unrelated and healthy, with no family history of stillbirths or malformations. The father was a heterozygous carrier of the mutation, whereas no mutation in the LPL gene was detected in the mother. Southern blotting did not reveal any LPL gene rearrangement in the proband or her parents. The proband was homozygous for 17 informative markers spanning both arms of chromosome 8 and specifically for the haplotype containing the paternally derived LPL gene. This shows that homozygosity for the defective mutation in the LPL gene resulted from a complete paternal isodisomy for chromosome 8. This is the first report of UPD for chromosome 8 unmasked by LPL deficiency and suggests that normal development can occur with two paternally derived copies of human chromosome 8.  相似文献   

14.
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) hydrolysis the triglyceride core of circulating chylomicrons and very-low-density lipoprotein, and modulates the levels and lipid composition of low and high density lipoproteins. Worldwide, more than 20 mutations in the LPL gene have been identified in patients with familial LPL deficiency. Most of these mutations are clustered in the region encoded by exons 4, 5 and 6 which forms the proposed catalytic domain of LPL. In French Canadians who have the highest reported frequency for LPL deficiency, three common mutations in the LPL gene have been identified which account for approximately 97% of mutant genes in this group. Simple DNA-based tests for the detection of all these mutations have been developed for the screening for carriers of LPL deficiency. This will facilitate further studies of phenotypic expression in heterozygous carriers and assessment of the risk of atherosclerosis in these individuals.  相似文献   

15.
The lipoprotein lipase (LPL) enzyme plays a major role in lipid metabolism, primarily by regulating the catabolism of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoprotein particles. The gene for LPL is an important candidate for affecting the risk of atherlosclerosis in the general population. Previously, we have shown that the HindIII polymorphism in intron 8 of the LPL gene is associated with plasma TG and HDL-cholesterol variation in Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites (NHWs). However, this polymorphism is located in an intron and hence may be in linkage disequilibrium with a functional mutation in the coding region or intron-exon junctions of the LPL gene. The aim of this study was to initially screen the LPL coding region and the intron-exon junctions by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis for mutation detection in a group of 86 individuals expressing the phenotype of high TG/low HDL, followed by association studies in a population-based sample of 1,014 Hispanics and NHWs. Four sequence variations were identified by SSCP and DNA sequencing in the coding region of the gene, including two missense mutations (D9N in exon 2 and N291S in exon 6), one samesense mutation (V108V in exon 3), and one nonsense mutation (S447X in exon 9). Multiple regression analyses, including these four mutations and the HindIII polymorphic site, indicate that the association of the HindIII site with plasma TG (P=0.001 in NHWs and P=0.002 in Hispanics) and HDL-cholesterol (P=0.007 in NHWs and P=0.127 in Hispanics) is independent of all other LPL variable sites examined. These observations reinforce the concept that the intronic 8 HindIII site is functional by itself and provide a strong rationale for future comprehensive functional studies to delineate its biological significance.  相似文献   

16.
We report here a study of the developmental and genetic control of tissue-specific expression of lipoprotein lipase, the enzyme responsible for hydrolysis of triglycerides in chylomicrons and very low density lipoproteins. Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) mRNA is present in a wide variety of adult rat and mouse tissues examined, albeit at very different levels. A remarkable increase in the levels of LPL mRNA occurs in heart over a period of several weeks following birth, closely paralleling developmental changes in lipase activity and myocardial beta-oxidation capacity. Large increases in LPL mRNA also occur during differentiation of 3T3L1 cells to adipocytes. As previously reported, at least two separate genetic loci control the tissue-specific expression of LPL activity in mice. One of the loci, controlling LPL activity in heart, is associated with an alteration in LPL mRNA size, while the other, controlling LPL activity in adipose tissue, appears to affect the translation or post-translational expression of LPL. To examine whether these genetic variations are due to mutations of the LPL structural locus, we mapped the LPL gene to a region of mouse chromosome 8 using restriction fragment-length polymorphisms and analysis of hamster-mouse somatic cell hybrids. This region is homologous to the region of human chromosome 8 which contains the human LPL gene as judged by the conservation of linked genetic markers. Genetic variations affecting LPL expression in heart cosegregated with the LPL gene, while variations affecting LPL expression in adipose tissue did not. Furthermore, Southern blotting analysis indicates that LPL is encoded by a single gene and, thus, the genetic differences are not a consequence of independent regulation of two separate genes in the two tissues. These results suggest the existence of cis-acting elements for LPL gene expression that operate in heart but not adipose tissue. Our results also indicate that two genetic mutations resulting in deficiencies of LPL in mice, the W mutation on chromosome 5 and the cld mutation on mouse chromosome 17, do not involve the LPL structural gene locus. Finally, we show that the gene for hepatic lipase, a member of a gene family with LPL, is unlinked to the gene for LPL. This indicates that combined deficiencies of LPL and hepatic lipase, observed in humans as well as in certain mutant strains of mice, do not result from focal disruptions of a cluster of lipase genes.  相似文献   

17.
Two novel mutations in the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene are described in an Austrian family: a splice site mutation in intron 1 (3 bp deletion of nucleotides -2 to -4) which results in skipping of exon 2, and a missense mutation in exon 5 which causes an asparagine for histidine substitution in codon 183 and complete loss of enzyme activity. A 5-year-old boy who exhibited all the clinical features of primary hyperchylomicronemia was a compound heterozygote for these two mutations. Nine other family members were investigated: seven were heterozygotes for the splice site mutation, one was a heterozygote for the missense mutation, and one had two wild-type alleles of the LPL gene. LPL activity in the post-heparin plasma of the heterozygotes was reduced to 49;-79% of the mean observed in normal individuals. Two of the heterozygotes had extremely high plasma triglyceride levels; in three of the other heterozygotes the plasma triglycerides were also elevated. As plasma triglycerides in carriers of one defective LPL allele can be normal or elevated, the heterozygotes of this family have been studied for a possible additional cause of the expression of hypertriglyceridemia in these subjects. Body mass index, insulin resistance, mutations in other candidate genes (Asn291Ser and Asp9Asn in the LPL gene, apoE isoforms, polymorphisms in the apoA-II gene and in the apoAI-CIII-AIV gene cluster, and in the IRS-1 gene) could be ruled out as possible factors contributing to the expression of hypertriglyceridemia in this family. A linkage analysis using the allelic marker D1S104 on chromosome 1q21;-q23 suggested that a gene in this region could play a role in the expression of hypertriglyceridemia in the heterozygous carriers of this family, but the evidence was not sufficiently strong to prove this assumption. Nevertheless, this polymorphic marker seems to be a good candidate for further studies.  相似文献   

18.
The expression of the gene for lipoprotein lipase (LPL) was studied in brown adipose tissue and the liver of combined lipase deficient (cld/cld) and unaffected mice. The mRNA specific for LPL was detected in both animals. Although the size of LPL mRNA in cld mice was similar to that of unaffected mice, the mRNA concentration in affected animals was higher than in unaffected animals. We also studied the LPL gene mutation in cld mice by Southern blot analysis. No restriction fragment length polymorphisms were observed after digestion with 16 endonucleases. These data indicate that there is no gene insertion or deletion, but do not exclude the possibility of point mutation in the LPL structural gene. However, the present results agree with the hypothesis that the genetic defect in cld is not due to a mutation in the LPL structural gene, but instead involves the defective post-translational processing of LPL or defective cellular function affecting transport and secretion of this enzyme group.  相似文献   

19.
Amino acids in three highly conserved segments of the Ca2(+)-ATPase. Asp-Pro-Pro-Arg604, Thr-Gly-Asp627, Thr-Gly-Asp703 as well as Asp707, have been proposed to participate in formation of the nucleotide binding site. We have tested this hypothesis by investigating the properties of mutants with alterations to amino acids within these segments. Most of the mutants were found to be defective in Ca2+ transport function. The inactive mutants could be separated into two classes on the basis of the kinetics of phosphoenzyme intermediate formation and decomposition. One group, Asp601----Asn, Pro603----Leu, Asp627----Glu, and Asp703----Asn, formed phosphoenzyme intermediates with ATP in the presence of Ca2+ and with inorganic phosphate only in the absence of Ca2+, indicating that both the high affinity Ca2+ binding sites and the nucleotide binding sites were intact. In each of these mutants, however, the ADP-sensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate (E1P) decayed to the ADP-insensitive phosphoenzyme intermediate very slowly, relative to the wild-type enzyme. Thus the inability of these mutants to transport Ca2+ was accounted for by an apparent block of the transport reaction at the E1P to E2P conformational transition. Another group, Asp601----Glu, Pro603----Gly, Asp707----Glu, and Asp707----Asn, did not form detectable phosphoenzyme intermediates from either ATP or Pi. Although we have demonstrated an effect on Ca2+ transport of mutations in each of the highly conserved regions predicted to be involved in ATP binding, we cannot yet define their roles in ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport.  相似文献   

20.
We are studying naturally occurring mutations in the gene for lipoprotein lipase (LPL) to advance our knowledge about the structure/function relationships for this enzyme. We and others have previously described 11 mutations in human LPL gene and until now none of these directly involves any of the residues in the proposed Asp156-His241-Ser132 catalytic triad. Here we report two separate probands who are deficient in LPL activity and have three different LPL gene haplotypes, suggesting three distinct mutations. Using polymerase chain reaction cloning and DNA sequencing we have identified that proband 1 is a compound heterozygote for a G----A transition at nucleotide 721, resulting in a substitution of asparagine for aspartic acid at residue 156, and a T----A transversion, resulting in a substitution of serine for cysteine at residues 216. Proband 2 is homozygous for an A----G base change at nucleotide 722, leading to a substitution of glycine for aspartic acid at residue 156. The presence of these mutations in the patients and available family members was confirmed by restriction analysis of polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA. In vitro site-directed mutagenesis and subsequent expression in COS cells have confirmed that all three mutations result in catalytically defective LPL. The two naturally occurring mutations, which both alter the same aspartic acid residue in the proposed Asp156-His241-Ser132 catalytic triad of human LPL, indicate that Asp156 plays a significant role in LPL catalysis. The Cys216----Ser mutation destroys a conserved disulfide bridge that is apparently critical for maintaining LPL structure and function.  相似文献   

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