Correction
2 Jun 2014: The PLOS ONE Staff (2014) Correction: Post-Heparin LPL Activity Measurement Using VLDL As a Substrate: A New Robust Method for Routine Assessment of Plasma Triglyceride Lipolysis Defects. PLOS ONE 9(6): e99721. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0099721 View correction
Figures
Abstract
Background
Determination of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity is important for hyperchylomicronemia diagnosis, but remains both unreliable and cumbersome with current methods. Consequently by using human VLDL as substrate we developed a new LPL assay which does not require sonication, radioactive or fluorescent particles.
Methods
Post-heparin plasma was added to the VLDL substrate prepared by ultracentrifugation of heat inactivated normolipidemic human serums, diluted in buffer, pH 8.15. Following incubation at 37°c, the NEFA (non esterified fatty acids) produced were assayed hourly for 4 hours. LPL activity was expressed as µmol/l/min after subtraction of hepatic lipase (HL) activity, obtained following LPL inhibition with NaCl 1.5 mmol/l. Molecular analysis of LPL, GPIHBP1, APOA5, APOC2, APOE genes was available for 62 patients.
Results
Our method was reproducible (coefficient of variation (CV): intra-assay 5.6%, inter-assay 7.1%), and tightly correlated with the conventional radiolabelled triolein emulsion method (n = 26, r = 0.88). Normal values were established at 34.8±12.8 µmol/l/min (mean±SD) from 20 control subjects. LPL activities obtained from 71 patients with documented history of major hypertriglyceridemia showed a trimodal distribution. Among the 11 patients with a very low LPL activity (<10 µmol/l/min), 5 were homozygous or compound heterozygous for LPL or GPIHBP1 deleterious mutations, 3 were compound heterozygous for APOA5 deleterious mutations and the p.S19W APOA5 susceptibility variant, and 2 were free of any mutations in the usual candidate genes. No homozygous gene alteration in LPL, GPIHBP1 and APOC2 genes was found in any of the patients with LPL activity >10 µmol/l/min.
Citation: Di Filippo M, Marçais C, Charrière S, Marmontel O, Broyer M, Delay M, et al. (2014) Post-Heparin LPL Activity Measurement Using VLDL As a Substrate: A New Robust Method for Routine Assessment of Plasma Triglyceride Lipolysis Defects. PLoS ONE 9(5): e96482. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096482
Editor: Paulo Lee Ho, Instituto Butantan, Brazil
Received: November 8, 2013; Accepted: April 7, 2014; Published: May 2, 2014
Copyright: © 2014 Di Filippo et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: The authors have no support or funding to report.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) (glycerol ester hydrolase, EC 3.1.1.34) plays a crucial role in the metabolism of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and chylomicrons [1], [2]. A large pool of this enzyme bound to heparin sulfate proteoglycans and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored high density lipoproteins binding protein 1 (GPIHBP1) through ionic linkage [3], [4], is releasable into plasma following the intravenous injection of heparin. Familial LPL deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder which is characterized by primary hyperchylomicronemia due to homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations of LPL gene [5] as well as to homozygous mutations of APOC2,GPIHBP1, APOA5 or LMF1 genes [6]–[8]. Additionally, sporadic forms of severe hypertriglyceridemia commonly result from complex interactions between environmental and genetic factors leading to various degrees of LPL deficiency [6]. Consequently, LPL activity measurement remains primordial in order to decipher the mechanisms underlying determinants of these heterogeneous phenotypes and bring irreplaceable information in case of negative or unavailable molecular diagnosis.
However, the LPL activity assay remains difficult. Methods using commercial triglyceride (TG) emulsions as a substrate are hampered by a high NEFA concentration at the basal state and a lack of specificity due to the presence of mono and diglycerides [9], [10]. The use of trioleyl substrates with the incorporation of radioactive tracers (3H) by sonication under strictly controlled conditions by Nilsson-Ehle et al published in 1972 [11], was a major improvement. However, this time-consuming assay needs to be performed in triplicate in order to minimize the intra-assay error [12]–[15]. Despite several improvements, most of the current methods using radiolabelled (3H or 14C) substrates cannot be run on automats and require cumbersome strategies to inhibit hepatic lipase activity. Some chromophoric [16]–[20] or fluorescent [21] substrates have been used; however the preparation of these substrates is problematic, the derivatives were unstable and the method not sensitive enough [21]. In a recent method, Basu D et al [15] used a commercially fluorescent substrate (EnzChek), esterified by BODIPY-C12 at the sn-1 position of glycerol, which was stable and solubilised with a specific detergent (Zwittergent). Although highly appealing, this method has not been tested in human post-heparin plasmas.
Therefore, we decided to set up a new reliable method sensitive enough to allow human post-heparin LPL activity measurement in routine conditions without requiring sonication, nor use of a fluorescent or radioactive substrate. Seeking reliability, we preferred to choose a natural substrate composed of pooled human VLDL, thereby also providing the optimal amount of human apoC-II.
Materials and Methods
Ethics Statement
Clinical investigations have been conducted according to the principles expressed in the Declaration of Helsinki. Informed written consent was obtained from the control subjects and the patients before DNA sampling and heparin injection. The study protocol was approved by our institutional ethical committee (Comité d'Ethique du CHU de Lyon).
Patients
Twenty adults control subjects (9 men, 11 women, mean age 52±17 years) were recruited in order to determine normal post-heparin LPL activity (without history of hypertriglyceridemia or diabetes). 71 hypertriglyceridemic patients with documented history of type V dyslipidemia (TVHTG) were assessed with the new method (Plasma TG concentration (TG) >15 mmol/l or familial history of hypertriglyceridemia with TG>10 mmol/l). Patients characteristics are summarized in Table 1.
Fasting venous blood samples were drawn into EDTA tubes on ice before (T0) and 10 min (T10) after a 50 U/kg intravenous heparin injection. The tubes were immediately centrifuged at 4°C and plasma was frozen at −80°C.
VLDL substrate preparation
VLDL substrate was used for the LPL assay: 20 ml of human serum were pooled from set of 10 human serum samples (TG 0.9–1.75 mmol/l, HDL-cholesterol >0.9 mmol/l, total cholesterol 3.2–5.5 mmol/l). VLDL from the pool were isolated in 1.2 ml polycarbonate tubes (Beckman) by preparative ultracentrifugation (d = 1.006 kg/l) using a Sorval Discovery M150 SE ultracentrifuge (Sorval S140 AT 017 Rotor: 140000 RPM (1042000 max) for 70 minutes). Floating VLDL were collected, stored at + 4° and used within 48 h; 360 µl of VLDL substrate at a final TG concentration of 7.3 mmol/l was used for both total post heparin and hepatic lipase activity assay. Before use, the VLDL substrate was heated at 56°C for one hour in order to inactivate any residual endogenous lipase activity.
Michaelis constant
The Michaelis constant (Km) was determined as the inverse of the Lineweaver-Burk line intercept using 6 different VLDL substrates with final TG concentration ranging from 0.80 to 6.80 mmol/l.
LPL activity assay
The inactivated VLDL substrate and the mixture for the enzymatic reaction were kept on ice until the start of the reaction at 37°C.
Total post-heparin lipase activity (PHLA) (A): 180 µl of VLDL substrate was mixed with 540 µL of buffer A (Tris 50 mmol/l, MgCl2 3 mmol/l, CaCl2 1.5 mmol/l, dodecylbetain (laurylbetain Ramidus AB, Ideon, SE-223 70 Lund, Sweden) detergent 0.03%, pH 8.15) leading to a 1.8 mmol/l final TG concentration; 10 µl of post-heparin plasma sample (T10) were added and mixed; 120 µl were distributed into 5 polycarbonate tubes. At the beginning of the enzymatic reaction, one tube was kept on ice (basal NEFA level), 4 tubes were incubated in a 37° shaking water-bath and each hour, one tube was removed and kept on ice. The NEFA concentration was assayed on the 5 tubes by an enzymatic method in duplicate (Wako kit, NEFA-HR(2)) on a Pentra 400 Roche instrument. Calculation of the enzymatic activity was made in the linear part of the curve (see results) between 60 and 180 minutes. The PHLA activity was expressed in µmol/l/min of released NEFA.
Hepatic Lipase (HL) activity (B): the assay was conducted with the same procedure, but with 20 µl of post-heparin plasma sample and buffer A was substituted by buffer B (Tris 50 mmol/l, NaCl 2 mmol/l, dodecylbetain detergent 0.03%, pH 8.15) in order to inhibit the LPL activity; the final NaCl concentration in the mix was 1.5 mmol/l.
LPL activity was obtained by the subtraction of hepatic lipase activity, measured with buffer B from total activity obtained with buffer A and expressed as µmol/l/min of produced NEFA. The enzymatic reaction was controlled using, as the external standard, a sample of a frozen pool of PHLA plasmas obtained from 8 control subjects.
LPL assay comparison with the radiolabelled method
A radiolabelled 14C-triolein emulsion was used as previously described [22]. The assays were performed in triplicate.
Molecular diagnosis
Following the extraction of genomic DNA from blood (Nucleon Bac3, GE Healthcare, Chalfont St. Giles, UK), the encoding regions, and the flanking intronic junctions of LPL, APOA5, APOC2 GPIHBP1 and APOE genes were PCR amplified as previously reported [23]-[26]. The amplicons were directly sequenced with the BigDye Terminator v3.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit on an ABI PRISM 3730 DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, USA).
In silico analyses of the mutations were performed with Alamut v2.0 (Interactive Software), Polyphen (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph/) and SIFT (http://sift.jcvi.org/www/SIFT_aligned_ seqs_submit.html).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS 17.0 software. T-test or non-parametric Mann Whitney tests were performed in order to compare mean/median of LPL activities between groups. Shapiro-Wilk test was used to assess the normality of the distribution of the post heparin LPL activities. p-values (two sided) less than 5% were considered significant. Linear regressions were performed to determine the correlation between LPL activity and age or the conventional radiolabelled method.
Results
Optimization of substrate
(see Supplemental data S1 and Figure S1)
First, we verified that similar lipoprotein profiles were obtained from different VLDL substrate pools (n = 40, the coefficient of variation (CV) was <5% for cholesterol and TG concentrations and <10% for apoB, C-II and C-III) (see Table S1). Second, the mean Km of the reaction was lower than 1.5 mmol/l (mean 1.42 mmol/l). In order to determine the optimal TG concentration chosen for the mixture, we tested 2 patient samples (PHLA activity 17.4 and 49.2 µmol/l/min) with 7 different TG concentrations in the mixture (ranging from 0.45 to 3.45 mmol/l); the activity was decreased (−44, −67%) with low TG levels (< 0.90 mmol/l) and slightly increased (+17, +24%) with high TG concentration (> 2.7 mmol/l) in the mixture (see Figure S2). Consequently, we established the optimal final concentration of TG in the assay mixture at 1.8 mmol/l.
Kinetics
Using the final substrate concentration set at TG = 1.8 mmol/l, the enzymatic reaction was found to be linear from 60 to 240 min of incubation, independently of the PHLA level, as shown in Figure 1A. Hepatic Lipase (HL) activity was low in these assay conditions and remained similarly low despite both a pH increase to 9.2 (optimal pH for HL) and a sample volume increased to 20 µl.
Figure 1A. PHLA and HL kinetics in 3 patients. LPL+HL (line); HL (dotted line); Patient 1 (triangle); Patient 2 (circle); Patient 3 (square); Patient 4 (vertical line). Figure 1B. Linearity test. Patient 1(black diamond); Patient 2 (white square); Patient 3 (grey triangle); Patient 4 (black square); Patient 5 (grey square); Patient 6 (grey circle).
In order to increase the accuracy of the LPL assay by optimizing the amount of released NEFA, the reaction time was set to 3 hours since both enzymatic PHLA and HL reactions were linear from 60 to 240 min; PHLA activity was calculated between 60 and 180 min, in order to avoid a possible loss of linearity after 180 min.
Limit of detection
The minimum level of detectable LPL activity was determined through two methods: first, we performed the assay using 6 pre-heparin control plasmas and second, with 5 inactivated (56°C one hour) control post-heparin plasmas. We discovered that the minimal detectable LPL activity (mean+3SD) was 2.7 µmol/l/min for the pre-heparin plasmas (from VLDL-bound LPL or other circulating lipases) and 1.68 µmol/l/min for the heat inactivated post-heparin plasmas.
Linearity
A strict linearity of the LPL assay was observed between 0–70 µmol/l/h, as determined by the increase or decrease of the plasma sample volume from 6 patients with normal or high LPL activity (from 20 to 100 µmol/l/min); the kinetics of the enzymatic reactions were linear with any sample volume (3 to 20 µl) (Figure 1B). Consequently, the high (>70 µmol/l/min) and low (<10 µmol/l/h) LPL activities should be reassayed with a decreased (5 µl) or increased (20 µl) volume of assay sample respectively.
Imprecision
The coefficient of variation (CV) of the intra-assay reproducibility was 5.6% for an LPL activity of 31.5 µmol/l/min (SD: 1.8 µmol/l/min).
The inter-assay reproducibility was studied by including a single sample from a PHLA frozen control pool in 16 consecutive series of independent LPL determinations; the CV was 7.1% (mean: 29.1±2.1 µmol/l/min). This sample allows an internal quality control of each assay.
Comparison with conventional radiolabelled method
26 post-heparin plasma LPL-HL activities obtained from hypertriglyceridemic patients with history of documented major hyperchylomicronemia were assayed for LPL activity by both methods (our new method versus the conventional 14C triolein method). LPL activities showed a strong positive correlation (r = 0.88, p<0.001) (Figure 2A).
Figure 2A. Correlation with conventional method (n = 26, r = 0.88, p<0.001). y = 8.93× + 1.21; R2 = 0.77. Figure 2B. Distribution of LPL activity in TVHTG patients and controls subjects. TVHTG patients (grey square); controls (black square).
LPL activity in controls and TVHTG patients
Normal values of LPL activity were established at 34.8±12.8 µmol/l/min (mean±SD; extreme values 10.6 to 62.2) in 20 control subjects (Figure 2B); the LPL activity was unchanged according to age (no correlation between LPL activity and age, r = 0.063) and gender: mean 30.9±11.7 µmol/l/min and 39.6+/−13.0 µmol/l/min in 11 females and 9 males respectively (p = 0.261).
Interestingly, LPL activities from the 71 TVHTG patients were widely distributed (activity range 0 to 103 µmol/l/min; mean: 30.5±18.2 µmol/l/min) with evidence for a non normal distribution (p<0.01) (Figure 2B). 11 patients had a low LPL activity (< 10 µmol/l/min (mean ± SD: 3.6±2.4 µmol/l/min)) and the LPL activities in the other patients with LPL between 10 and 55 µmol/l/min were normally distributed around the median of this group (p = 0.97, median: 31.6 µmol/l/min, mean: 32.1±8.6, n = 51). A group of 6 TVHTG patients had high LPL activity despite hypertriglyceridemia.
LPL activity and molecular diagnosis in hypertriglyceridemic patients with TVHTG
Among the 71 patients with history of major hypertriglyceridemia included, molecular assessment was available for 62 patients; all of which were examined for LPL gene mutations. 58 patients had a molecular diagnosis for additional candidate genes involved in the regulation of LPL activity (APOA5, GPIHBP1, APOC2, APOE). 5 new mutations were found: p.V227G in LPL gene, p.Y110LfsX158, p.Q295X and p.R343C in APOA5 gene and p.Q246R in APOE gene (See Table S2).
Mutations in LPL, GPIHBP1, APOA5 or APOC2 genes were not found in 15/58 (26%) TVHTG patients (Figure 3, lane 1). In this group, most patients (13/15) presented normal LPL activity whereas 2 patients had both a very low LPL activity (1.6 and 3.7 µmol/l/min) and a clear familial history of hyperchylomicronemia. 1 of these 2 patients was found to be a carrier of p.Q246R a new missense heterozygous APOE gene mutation.
$ 3 diabetic compound heterozygous patients ([p.Q139X];[p.S19W polymorphism]); * patient with anti-LPL antibodies and heterozygous mutation of LPL gene; £ Triglyceridemia determined the day of LPL activity measurement.
LPL activity was found in the reference interval in the 20/58 patients who harboured only APOA5 or APOC2 susceptibility polymorphisms (APOA5 p.S19W, APOA5 haplotype 2 or APOC2 p.K41T) (lane2). LPL activity was also found in the reference interval in the 7/58 patients who had either heterozygous LPL or APOA5 deleterious mutation as well as in a single patient with a homozygous deleterious APOA5 missense mutation (lane 3).
Conversely all the 5 homozygous or compound heterozygous patients with deleterious LPL or GPIHBP1 mutations had a drastically reduced LPL activity (lane 5 and see Table S2).
We considered a subgroup of TVHTG patients (8/58) defined as compound heterozygotes for a deleterious APOA5 mutation and, on the second allele, a susceptibility polymorphism (either APOA5-haplotype 2 or APOA5-haplotye 3 (p.S19W)) (lane 4). 3 of these patients presented a low LPL activity < 10 µmol/l/min while 5 had a normal LPL activity.
3 patients had LPL auto-antibodies, only 1/3 displayed a low LPL activity (lane 6) at the time of blood drawing (3.1 µmol/l/min): this patient was also heterozygous for the LPL p.P200LfsX7 frame shift mutation and was previously reported with low LPL activity using the triolein emulsion conventional assay [27].
Overall, drastically reduced LPL activity (<10 µmol/l/min) was discovered in 11 TVHTG patients (TG mean ±SD: 20.5±27.0 mmol/l): 5 of which were identified with obvious causal genotypes in either LPL or GPIHBP1 genes and 4 of which had genotypes most likely to contribute to their hyperchylomicronemia. Additionally, 2 pediatric patients with family history of dominant hypertriglyceridemia had a clear lipolysis defect although there was no causal genotype yet identified in candidate genes.
Compared to patient with low LPL activity (<10 µmol/l/min), the 47 genotyped (TVHTG) patients with LPL activity over 10 µmol/l/min had milder hypertriglyceridemia (8.9±8.0 mmol/l p<0.01). In this group, no correlation between LPL activity and plasma TG concentration was found (r = 0.14). None of these patients had either homozygous or combined heterozygous deleterious mutations in LPL, APOC2, or GPIHBP1.
Discussion
We propose a robust, very reproducible and convenient method to determine LPL activity in human post-heparin plasma. The absence of radiolabelled emulsion prevents the requirement of unreliable sonication under stringent conditions and avoid the use of costly and problematic reagent. Human VLDL constitute the natural substrate of LPL with an optimal composition in apoC-II and apoC-III similar to the concentrations found in normal plasma. The use of a pool of 10 plasmas obtained from control subjects provides a reproducible composition and lipolysis ability. Since fresh VLDL substrate for each LPL activity assay was needed, care was taken to control each assay with a pool of PHLA control plasmas. The dilution of the VLDL substrate was performed in a TRIS buffer in order to provide the necessary ions, optimal pH and suitable detergent conditions for an optimal reaction. A pH of 8.15 was considered as the optimal pH for the LPL activity [9], [17], [28]–[30]. The low HL activity found with our new method could be due to the fact that VLDL is not the optimal substrate for HL [31].
Since the kinetics of PHLA with a human VLDL substrate was not yet documented, we ascertained the linearity and the Michaelis constant (Km) of the enzymatic reaction. The Km found using human VLDL was in the range of several Km reported using artificial TG emulsions (0.1 to 2.5 mmol/l) [9], [16], [32]. We chose to work with a substrate concentration of 1.8 mmol/l; within these conditions, the upper linearity of the LPL activity is sufficient (70 µmol/l/min); however the highest LPL activity level needs a decrease of sample volume while the lowest LPL activity may need an increase of volume. The use of a substrate TG concentration set at 1.8 mmol/l offers many advantages: firstly, the substrate can be prepared from normal serums; secondly, the required amount of TG VLDL is low.
The robustness of the method is optimal. The inter-assay reproducibility (CV 7.1%) is lower than those of most conventional triolein methods (mean CV 11.6%, range 5–25%) reported from 11 different methods by Henriksen [12]–[15], [17], [29], [33], [34]. The correlation with a radiolabelled triolein method was tight (r = 0.88), similar to that obtained by Imamura (dioleyl substrate versus labelled triolein, r = 0.79) (p = 0.21) [35]. Surprisingly, the other published methods with non-labelled soluble substrates did not provide any correlation with the conventional radiolabelled emulsion method [15]–[19].
Post-heparin LPL activity level in our normal controls (34.8±12.8 µmol/l/min) was in the low range of those reported by the conventional method [24], [36]. However, a huge heterogeneity is found amongst the published methods. The differences in normal LPL activity levels could be due to the use of different substrates, various doses of injected heparin (from 10 to 100 UI/kg body weight), apoC-II concentrations, pH of the reaction mixture, concentration of albumin, and method of inhibition of LPL and HL. All of these discrepancies were well described by Henriksen et al. who reported 11 published LPL activity assays, the reference values ranging from 25 to 362 mU/ml [34].
Our method provides a convenient tool to identify patients with a major defect in LPL activity. All patients with homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations of LPL and GPIHBP1 were below the cut off point of 10 µmol/l/min, which is in agreement with previous reports for LPL and GPIHBP1 genes mutations [14], [37]. Interestingly, except these 11 patients, all the other TVHTG patients had LPL activities similar to control subjects, with several high LPL values, as previously reported by Coca-Prieto [14]. As expected, our 4 patients with heterozygous LPL mutations were identified in the group of TVHTG patients with normal LPL activity except for one patient who additionally had neutralising anti LPL antibodies [27]. Surprisingly, LPL activity has been poorly documented in heterozygous LPL mutation carriers with a history of type V hyperlipidemia. According with our findings, Surendram [8] recently described 2 LPL and 1 GPIHBP1 new heterozygous missense mutations with normal LPL activity. All these findings are consistent with the knowledge that under dietetic conditions, patients with heterozygous LPL mutations have normal or mildly increased TG levels due to sufficient residual LPL activity [38]. Interestingly, LPL activity levels in our patients with APOA5 mutations were highly heterogeneous. Normal activity was found in one patient with a homozygous missense APOA5 mutation (p.R343C) predicted to alter apoAV function. A very low LPL activity was found in 3 diabetic patients compound heterozygous for APOA5 p.Q139X mutation and APOA5 signal peptide p.S19W polymorphism. These patients were previously reported as having a very low activity using LPL activity emulsion method [24]. Finally, LPL activity was normal for 5 patients with other heterozygous deleterious APOA5 mutations combined with the heterozygous p.S19W polymorphism. It remains possible that these variants are present on the same haplotype, leaving a functional APOA5 allele in some of these patients. The discrepancy of LPL activity in APOA5 deficient patients underlines the complexity of the phenotype and the necessity to have access to LPL activity in order to understand the high phenotypic variability of these patients. Occurrence of transient severe LPL deficiency might correspond to complex and not yet fully elucidated gene-gene interactions or gene-environment interactions.
In TVHTG patients, over half did not harbour any genetic mutation in LPL, APOA5, APOC2, GPIHBP1, APOE: 34% had only minor APOA5 or GPIHBP1 defects and 26% were not found to harbour any variants in candidate genes. This distribution is in complete accordance with Surendram [8] who had 47% HTG patients without mutations in candidate genes (26% with only polymorphism and 21% with no variants) and reports from other teams [7]. However LPL activity was not systematically reported in these series. Our new method identified 2 TVHTG patients with an apparent autosomal dominant transmission, a very low LPL activity, no deleterious mutation in any usual candidate genes (including LMF1) and no evidence for autoimmunity (Figure 3, lane 1).
These findings illustrate the importance of accurate routine LPL activity assessment in order to decipher the phenotype of TVHTG patients. The discrepancy between hyperchylomicronemia and normal LPL activities raises the question of the role of additional regulators of heparin releasable LPL and/or molecular mechanisms leading to transient LPL deficiencies. Although less decisive than molecular genetic testing for etiologic diagnosis, the finding of low LPL activity in patients without mutation or conversely very high activity in patients supposed to have major genetic defect, raise some major questions about the regulation of TG metabolism and bring valuable information for diagnosis. Due to its robustness and its excellent reproducibility, this new method using human VLDL as natural substrate provides a convenient tool in order to explore the underlying mechanisms of misunderstood hyperchylomicronemia.
Supporting Information
Figure S1.
Optimization of the assay: triglycerides concentration in the mixture. Triglycerides concentration 25% (line); 50% (dotted line) Pool 23 (diamond); Pool 24 (circle) PHLA kinetics of 1 control plasma activity with 2 different VLDL substrates used at 2 TG concentrations (25 and 50%, i.e. TG 1.8 and 3.6 mmol/l).
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096482.s002
(DOC)
Figure S2.
PHLA measured with different triglycerides concentration substrate in the reaction. Patient 1 PHLA = 17.4 µmol/l/min (black line); Patient 2 PHLA = 49.2 µmol/l/min (grey line) 100% of activity was fixed with triglycerides in the mixture at 1.8 mmol/l.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096482.s003
(DOC)
Table S1.
Lipids and apoproteins of the VLDL substrates (n = 40 different pools of VLDL).
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096482.s004
(DOC)
Table S2.
Genetic variants identified in candidate genes in TVHTG patients.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096482.s005
(DOC)
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Pr Gilles Rioufol, Pr Gérard Finet, Dr François Sassolas, and Pierre-Valentin Laffitte for their contribution in control recruitment, and Dr Bénédicte Mousson de Camaret and Marjorie Dumoux for technical assistance.
Author Contributions
Conceived and designed the experiments: MDF CM SC ML PM AS. Performed the experiments: OM MB MD MM AN VPD. Analyzed the data: MDF CM SC OM MB MD MM AN VPD. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: OM MB MD MM AN VPD RV. Wrote the paper: MDF CM SC ML PM AS RV.
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