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Inherited hyperchylomicro-naemia in the cat: Lipoprotein lipase function and gene structure
Authors:T D G Watson †  D Gaffhey  C T Mooney†  H Thompson‡  C J Packard  J Shepherd
Institution:*Department of Pathological Biochemistry, Royal Infirmary, Glasgow G4 OSF;?Departments of Veterinary Medicine;?Veterinary Pathology, University of Glasgow Veterinary School, Bearsden Road, Glasgow G61 1QH
Abstract:Hyperchylomicronaemia was identified in a four-week-old Siamese kitten with lethargy, in-appetence, hindlimb ataxia and profound anaemia. The kitten was euthanased and at necropsy a thrombus was found occluding the caudal aorta. Two littermates later presented with lethargy, inappetence and hypertriglyceri-daemia which resolved after being weaned on to a low fat diet. A similar condition was subsequently diagnosed in a kitten born to the same sire but a different queen. The expression of hyperchylomicronaemia in two related litters was suggestive of an inherited, familial defect in the function of lipoprotein lipase (LPL). The activity of this enzyme was reduced in all three parents, the two recovered cases and two related, but apparently unaffected kittens, compared with a control group of unrelated cats belonging to the breeder. This reduction in activity was not attributable to defective activation of LPL by its serum cofactor apolipoprotein C-II or the presence in plasma of a factor that inhibited LPL. The gene that codes for LPL was examined by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis using a human LPL cDNA probe. The results showed that the cat has a similar, but not identical, LPL gene to man. However, there were no differences in the restriction fragment patterns obtained from affected, unaffected and control animals.
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