To address the question whether an increase in insulinemia and/or glycemia affects the total activity of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in circulation, the enzyme activity was measured after periods of hyperinsulinemia (HI), hyperglycemia (HG), and combined hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia (HIHG) induced by euglycemic hyperglycemic clamp, hyperglycemic clamp with the infusion of somatostatin to inhibit endogenous insulin secretion, and hyperglycemic clamp, respectively. The results obtained were compared to those after saline infusion (C). Twelve healthy normolipidemic and non-obese men with normal glucose tolerance were included in the study. At the end of each clamp study, LPL activity was determined first in vivo using an intravenous fat tolerance test and then in vitro in postheparin plasma. Whereas isolated HI had no effect on LPL activity in postheparin plasma, both HG and HIHG reduced LPL activity to 60 % and 56 % of that observed after saline infusion. Similarly, the k2 rate constant determined in intravenous fat tolerance test was reduced to 95 %, 84 %, and 54 % after periods of HI, HG, and HIHG, respectively. The activity of hepatic lipase, another lipase involved in lipoprotein metabolism, was not affected by hyperinsulinemia and/or hyperglycemia. In conclusion, our data suggest that hyperglycemia per se can downregulate the total LPL activity in circulation.
Animal studies (on transgenic and knock-out mice) and human association analysis assessed the importance of APOAV gene for plasma triglyceride determination. New APOAV missense variants (Val153 → Met and Cys185 → Gly) have been detected recently. We have analyzed these variants in 83 unrelated patients with extreme lipid parameters (triglycerides of 20.4±12.8 mmol/l and total cholesterol of 10.4±3.7 mmol/l) and in a control population group consisting of 2,559 unrelated Caucasians. In patients, the frequency of the Met153 carriers was slightly but not significantly higher (9.64 % vs. 6.49 %) compared to the population sample. This suggested that Val153 → Met polymorphism in the APOAV gene does not represent an important risk factor for developing the extreme levels of plasma triglycerides. We did not detect carriers of the Gly185 allele among patients or 420 healthy individuals. We suppose that this variant is probably not present in Caucasian populations.