Genetic Heterogeneity of Familial Hypercholesterolemia: Repercussions for Molecular Diagnosis.

International journal of molecular sciences(2023)

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Abstract
Genetics of Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) is ascribable to pathogenic variants in genes encoding proteins leading to an impaired LDL uptake by the LDL receptor (LDLR). Two forms of the disease are possible, heterozygous (HeFH) and homozygous (HoFH), caused by one or two pathogenic variants, respectively, in the three main genes that are responsible for the autosomal dominant disease: , and genes. The HeFH is the most common genetic disease in humans, being the prevalence about 1:300. Variants in the gene causes FH with a recessive inheritance and a specific variant was described as causative of FH, contributing to increase FH genetic heterogeneity. In addition, variants in genes causing other dyslipidemias showing phenotypes overlapping with FH may mimic FH in patients without causative variants (FH-phenocopies; , , and genes) or act as phenotype modifiers in patients with a pathogenic variant in a causative gene. The presence of several common variants was also considered a genetic basis of FH and several polygenic risk scores (PRS) have been described. The presence of a variant in modifier genes or high PRS in HeFH further exacerbates the phenotype, partially justifying its variability among patients. This review aims to report the updates on the genetic and molecular bases of FH with their implication for molecular diagnosis.
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Key words
FH phenocopies,familial hypercholesterolemia,genetic heterogeneity,genetics,modifier factor,molecular diagnosis,oligogenic FH,phenotypic variability,polygenic risk score
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