Abstract

A six-year-old girl with severe hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis had two defective genes at the low-density-lipoprotein (LDL) receptor locus, as determined by biochemical studies of cultured fibroblasts. One gene, inherited from the mother, produced no LDL receptors; the other gene, inherited from the father, produced a receptor precursor that was not transported to the cell surface and was unable to bind LDL. The patient degraded intravenously administered 125I-LDL at an extremely low rate, indicating that her high plasma LDL-cholesterol level was caused by defective receptor-mediated removal of LDL from plasma. After transplantation of a liver and a heart from a normal donor, the patient's plasma LDL-cholesterol level declined by 81 per cent, from 988 to 184 mg per deciliter. The fractional catabolic rate for intravenously administered 125I-LDL, a measure of functional LDL receptors in vivo, increased by 2.5-fold. Thus, the transplanted liver, with its normal complement of LDL receptors, was able to remove LDL cholesterol from plasma at a nearly normal rate. We conclude that a genetically determined deficiency of LDL receptors can be largely reversed by liver transplantation. These data underscore the importance of hepatic LDL receptors in controlling the plasma level of LDL cholesterol in human beings.

Keywords

LDL receptorFamilial hypercholesterolemiaReceptorEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineCholesterolTransplantationLiver transplantationLow-density lipoproteinCatabolismLipoproteinMetabolism

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Year
1984
Type
article
Volume
311
Issue
26
Pages
1658-1664
Citations
445
Access
Closed

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David W. Bilheimer, Joseph L. Goldstein, Scott M. Grundy et al. (1984). Liver Transplantation to Provide Low-Density-Lipoprotein Receptors and Lower Plasma Cholesterol in a Child with Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia. New England Journal of Medicine , 311 (26) , 1658-1664. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198412273112603

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DOI
10.1056/nejm198412273112603