Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 346, Issue 8979, 30 September 1995, Pages 869-872
The Lancet

Gln-Arg192 polymorphism of paraoxonase and coronary heart disease in type 2 diabetes

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(95)92709-3Get rights and content

Abstract

Summary

Paraoxonase is a high-density-lipoprotein-associated enzyme capable of hydrolysing lipid peroxides. Thus it might protect lipoproteins from oxidation. It has two isoforms, which arise from a glutamine (A isoform) to arginine (B isoform) interchange at position 192. The relevance of this polymorphism to coronary heart disease (CHD) in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients was investigated in case-control study.

Of the 434 patients, 171 had confirmed coronary artery disease; the other 263 had no history of such disease. The B allele and AB+BB genotypes were associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease. Compared with subjects homozygous for the A allele (AA genotype), the odds ratio of CHD for subjects homozygous for the B allele was 2·5 (95% Cl 1·2-5·3) and that for those heterozygous for the B allele was 1·6 (95% CI 1·1-2·4), suggesting a co-dominant effect on cardiovascular risk. When subjected to multivariate analysis, the B allele remained significantly associated with CHD (odds ratio 1·94, p=0·03).

The paraoxonase gene polymorphism is thus an independent cardiovascular risk factor in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients. A possible explanation for this finding is that activity of the paraoxonase B isotype does not protect well against lipid oxidation, a major atherogenic pathway.

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