Abstract
The molecular mechanisms regulating the amount of dietary cholesterol retained in the body, as well as the body's ability to exclude selectively other dietary sterols, are poorly understood. An average western diet will contain about 250–500 mg of dietary cholesterol and about 200–400 mg of non-cholesterol sterols. About 50–60% of the dietary cholesterol is absorbed and retained by the normal human body, but less than 1% of the non-cholesterol sterols are retained. Thus, there exists a subtle mechanism that allows the body to distinguish between cholesterol and non-cholesterol sterols. In sitosterolemia, a rare autosomal recessive disorder, affected individuals hyperabsorb not only cholesterol but also all other sterols, including plant and shellfish sterols from the intestine1,2. The major plant sterol species is sitosterol; hence the name of the disorder. Consequently, patients with this disease have very high levels of plant sterols in the plasma and develop tendon and tuberous xanthomas, accelerated atherosclerosis, and premature coronary artery disease3. We previously mapped the STSL locus to human chromosome 2p21 (ref. 4) and further localized it to a region of less than 2 cM bounded by markers D2S2294 and D2S2291 (M.-H.L. et al., manuscript submitted). We now report that a new member of the ABC transporter family, ABCG5, is mutant in nine unrelated sitosterolemia patients.
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Acknowledgements
We thank the families for participation; Y. Zhou for technical assistance; the General Clinical Research Center, MUSC, for assistance with sequencing; and the members of the Patel lab for discussions. This work was supported by grants from the NIH and USPHS.
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Lee, MH., Lu, K., Hazard, S. et al. Identification of a gene, ABCG5, important in the regulation of dietary cholesterol absorption. Nat Genet 27, 79–83 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/83799
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/83799
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