Search results for "cholesterol"
showing 10 items of 1211 documents
A Genome-Wide Screen for Interactions Reveals a New Locus on 4p15 Modifying the Effect of Waist-to-Hip Ratio on Total Cholesterol
2011
Recent genome-wide association (GWA) studies described 95 loci controlling serum lipid levels. These common variants explain ∼25% of the heritability of the phenotypes. To date, no unbiased screen for gene–environment interactions for circulating lipids has been reported. We screened for variants that modify the relationship between known epidemiological risk factors and circulating lipid levels in a meta-analysis of genome-wide association (GWA) data from 18 population-based cohorts with European ancestry (maximum N = 32,225). We collected 8 further cohorts (N = 17,102) for replication, and rs6448771 on 4p15 demonstrated genome-wide significant interaction with waist-to-hip-ratio (WHR) on …
Phytosterols: to be or not to be toxic; that is the question
2008
Plant sterols (phytosterols) are membrane constituents of all plants with a structure analogous to that of cholesterol. Thus, phytosterols have either an additional methyl or ethyl group on the carbon-24 position or an additional double bond in the side chain (1) . Noteworthy, in patients with the rare inherited disease of phytosterolaemia characterized by a hyperabsorption and diminished biliary secretion of cholesterol and phytosterols as well as by tendon and tuberous xanthoma, elevated plasma concentrations of phytosterols (campesterol, sitosterol) have been shown to constitute a risk factor for premature atherosclerosis (2) . However, whether plasma concentrations of campesterol and si…
Plasma lipidome patterns associated with cardiovascular risk in the PREDIMED trial: A case-cohort study.
2017
Abstract Background The study of the plasma lipidome may help to better characterize molecular mechanisms underlying cardiovascular disease. The identification of new lipid biomarkers could provide future targets for prevention and innovative therapeutic approaches. In the frame of the PREDIMED trial, our aim was to examine the associations of baseline lipidome patterns or their changes with the risk of clinical CVD events. Methods We included 983 participants in our case-cohort study. The end-point was the incidence of major CVD during 4.8years of median follow-up. We repeatedly measured 202 plasma known lipid metabolites at baseline and after 1-year of intervention. Principal component an…
Lipoprotein(a) – Marker for cardiovascular risk and target for lipoprotein apheresis
2019
Lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) consists of an LDL particle whose apolipoprotein B (apoB) is covalently bound to apolipoprotein(a) (apo[a]). An increased Lp(a) concentration is a causal, independent risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and a predictor of incident or recurrent cardiovascular events. Although Lp(a) was first described as early as 1963, only the more recent results of epidemiological, molecular, and genetic studies have led to this unequivocal conclusion. More than 20% of Western populations have elevated Lp(a) values. Lp(a) concentrations should be always part of the lipid profile when ASCVD risk is assessed. However, presence of other risk factors, laborator…
Filipin labelling and intramembrane particles on the membranes of early and later autophagic vacuoles in Ehrlich ascites cells
1987
Cholesterol and intramembrane particle distribution on autophagic vacuole membranes was studied in Ehrlich ascites cells using filipin labelling and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Unsaturated fatty acids were stained using imidazole-buffered osmium tetroxide. Autophagocytosis was induced with vinblastine, and early autophagic vacuoles were accumulated by lowering the ATP level in the cells with iodoacetate. Filipin labelling was observed in the limiting membranes of later, apparently hydrolase-containing autophagic vacuoles, whereas the most newly-formed, doublemembrane limited vacuoles were not labelled. The limiting membranes of late, residual body-type vacuoles either showed patchy…
Enhanced susceptibility of cholesteryl sulfate-enriched low density lipoproteins to copper-mediated oxidation
1995
AbstractCholesteryl sulfate (CS) is a minor component of cell membranes, also present in lipoproteins, and its exact function is unknown. Since oxidation of low density lipoproteins (LDL) is thought to be an important determinant of atherogenesis, we investigated the influence of CS enrichment on copper-mediated oxidation of LDL. CS was found to act as a pro-oxidant, as measured by lipid oxidation parameters. The results also suggest that these effects were dependent on the sulfate group since pure cholesterol or cholesteryl acetate did not promote Cu2+-mediated oxidation. Our findings imply that CS may affect the oxidizability and hence the potential atherogenicity of LDL.
Pro-oxidant effects of 7-hydroperoxycholest-5-en-3β-ol on the copper-initiated oxidation of low density lipoprotein
1995
AbstractIn low density lipoproteins (LDL) supplemented with aged cholesterol and oxidized in the presence of Cu2+, an increase of the lipid oxidation parameters was observed compared with pure cholesterol-enriched LDL. A compound, identified as 7-hydroperoxycholesterol (7HPC), isolated from aged cholesterol and added to LDL, reproduced the above effects. The results indicate that the pro-oxidant effect of 7HPC is dependent on the hydroperoxy group since the corresponding alcohol derivative, 7α-hydroxycholesterol, had no such effect. These data suggest that among the LDL-associated lipid peroxides, cholesterol peroxides may have important implications in the susceptibility of this lipoprotei…
Lipid rafts: a signalling platform linking lipoprotein metabolism to atherogenesis.
2012
Lipid rafts are microdomains of the plasma membrane which are enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids. They serve as a platform for signal transduction, in particular during immune and inflammatory responses. As hypercholesterolemia and inflammation are two key elements of atherogenesis, it is conceivable that the cholesterol and cholesterol oxide content of lipid rafts might influence the inflammatory signalling pathways, thus modulating the development of atherosclerosis. In support of this emerging view, lipid rafts have been shown to be involved in several key steps of atherogenesis, such as the oxysterol-mediated apoptosis of vascular cells, the blunted ability of high density lipopr…
modifications peroxysomales associées à l'oxyapoptophagie induite par le 7-cétocholestérol et identification de lipides cytoprotecteurs
2020
Oxidative stress is often increased in several diseases such as age-related diseases (cardiovascular diseases, eye diseases (age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and cataracts), neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis), chronic inflammatory diseases (chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)) as well as certain rare genetic diseases (Niemann Pick's disease, X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD)). Oxidative stress can oxidize various molecules, in particular the cholesterol present in lipid membranes, and lead to the formation of oxidized cholesterol derivatives: oxysterols. Some of them, such as 7-ketocholesterol (7KC), are toxic and may be the cause of a type o…
The PCSK9 gene: a new gene controlling cholesterolemia
2007
The distribution of cholesterol plasma is regulated by complex interactions between genes and environmental factors. Mutations of PCSK9 gene seem to modulate the levels of LDLC. Mutations of PCSK9 gene with gain of function are associated to hypercholesterolemia and mutations with loss of function determine hypocholesterolemia.