Associations Between Soluble LDLR and Lipoproteins in a White Cohort and the Effect of PCSK9 Loss-of-Function

2018 
Context: Elevated circulating cholesterol-rich low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles increase coronary artery disease risk. Cell-surface hepatic LDL receptors (LDLRs) clear 70% of these particles from circulation. The ectodomain of LDLR is shed into circulation, preventing it from removing LDL particles. The role that LDLR ectodomain shedding plays as a regulatory mechanism is unknown. Objective: We describe LDLR shedding via the relationships between circulating soluble LDLRs (sLDLRs) and serum lipoproteins, serum proprotein convertase subtilin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9; a negative regulator of LDLR), and clinical parameters in a white Canadian population. Design: Population-based, cross-sectional study. Settings: Clinical Research Center, The Ottawa Hospital, and Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa. Participants: Two hundred seventy-three white Canadians. Intervention: None. Main Outcome Measures: sLDLR measured by ELISA; serum lipids and PCSK9, PCSK9 genotypes, and clinical parameters from previous analyses. Results: sLDLRs correlated strongly with triglycerides (TG; r = 0.624, P 50th or LDL cholesterol >75th percentiles. Conclusions: Serum sLDLR levels correlate with several lipoprotein parameters, especially TG, and the presence of PCSK9 loss-of-function variants alters sLDLR levels and correlations, except for TG. Ectodomain LDLR shedding has a role in LDL metabolism, distinct from PCSK9, with interplay between these two pathways that regulate cell-surface LDLRs. Findings suggest alteration of LDLR shedding could emerge as a target to treat dyslipidemia.
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