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American Journal of Human Genetics logoLink to American Journal of Human Genetics
. 1991 Dec;49(6):1155–1166.

The gender-specific apolipoprotein E genotype influence on the distribution of lipids and apolipoproteins in the population of Rochester, MN. I. Pleiotropic effects on means and variances.

S L Reilly 1, R E Ferrell 1, B A Kottke 1, M I Kamboh 1, C F Sing 1
PMCID: PMC1686446  PMID: 1842218

Abstract

The influences of the apolipoprotein E (Apo E) polymorphism and of gender on the distributions of plasma levels of total cholesterol (Total-C), 1n triglycerides (1n Trig), HDL cholesterol (HDL-C), and apolipoproteins AI (Apo AI), AII (Apo AII), 1n E (1nApo E), B (Apo B), CII (Apo CII), and 1n CIII (1nApo CIII) were studied in 507 unrelated individuals representative of the adult population of Rochester, MN. Apo E genotypes influenced both phenotypic level and intragenotype phenotypic variability. The mean levels of six of the nine traits were influenced significantly by Apo E genotype. Intragenotype variability in eight of the nine traits was significantly different among Apo E genotypes. These effects were estimated separately in males and females. The contribution of allelic variation in the Apo E gene to the definition of the multivariate mena and variance of the lipid and apolipoprotein hyperspace was evaluated. These findings were used to demonstrate how heterogeneity of risk-factor-trait variance among genotype/gender-specific subgroups of the population at large may influence the evaluation of risk of coronary artery disease.

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Selected References

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