Connecticut: A common mutation in a gene that regulates cholesterol levels may
raise the risk of heart disease in carriers, according to a new UConn
Health study. Researchers examined a mutation called the missense rs4238001
variant, which alters the type of protein made by the gene SCARB1, and
thereby the body’s cholesterol regulation. The study, led by Annabelle Rodriguez-Oquendo, an endocrinologist at
UConn Health, was based on information about more than 5,000 people who
participated in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Artherosclerosis in major
American cities from 2000 to 2002.
Rodriguez-Oquendo and her team charted the genotypes of the
participants and tracked episodes of heart disease over a period of
seven years.
They found that the mutation was associated with an increased risk of
heart disease, particularly among men and African Americans, findings published in the May 20 issue of PLOS ONE.
The risk of heart disease among participants with the rs4238001
variant was up to 49 percent greater than the general population.
Overall, men with the variant had a 29 percent higher risk than men
without. African American males fared the worst, with a 49 percent
increased risk, as compared to white males, whose risk was 24 percent
higher.
The mutation is not rare, according to Rodriguez-Oquendo. A genetic
test for the rs4238001 SNP is already available to help clinicians
identify patients who are carriers so that they can offer counseling
about heart risk prevention.
But now that the UConn study has made the connection between the
mutation in SCARB1 and heart disease, the researchers want to figure out
a way to fix it.
“We want to go deep in the cell, and figure out how to repair it,”
Rodriguez-Oquendo says. “We’re really interested in understanding more
about how this protein gets chewed up and degraded faster.”
The answers may impact the current standard of care for heart disease
prevention and treatment for patients who are carriers of this genetic
variant. That could happen through indirect means, such as adjusting
hormone levels to alter cholesterol metabolism.