We propose the following classification: familial hypercholesterolemia syndrome integrated by (1) heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia: patients with clinically definite FH and a functional mutation in one allele of the LDLR, ApoB:100, and PCSK9 genes; (2) homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia: mutations affect both alleles; (3) polygenic familial hypercholesterolemia: patients with clinically definite FH but no mutations associated with FH are found (to be distinguished from non-familial, multifactorial hypercholesterolemia); (4) familial hypercholesterolemia combined with hypertriglyceridemia: a subgroup of familial combined hyperlipidaemia patients fulfilling clinically definite FH with associated hypertriglyceridemia.
These findings suggest that a) the LDL receptor alone can account for the clearance of apoE-containing lipoproteins in mice, and the contribution of other receptors is minimal, and b) defects in either the LDL receptor or in apoE that affect its interactions with the LDL receptor, increase the sensitivity to apoE-induced hypertriglyceridemia in mice.
The composition, structural properties and binding of very-low-density and low-density lipoproteins to the LDL receptor in normo- and hypertriglyceridemia: relation to the apolipoprotein E phenotype.
Removing one or both low density lipoprotein receptor alleles in the apoE3-overexpressing mice caused severe HTG (8-11-fold over nontransgenics) and increased VLDL and decreased low and high density lipoproteins, and apoE3-enriched VLDL were markedly depleted in apoC-II.