To examine the role of C/EBP-related transcription factors in long-term synaptic plasticity and memory storage, we have used the tetracycline-regulated system and expressed in the forebrain of mice a broad dominant-negative inhibitor of C/EBP (EGFP-AZIP), which preferentially interacts with several inhibiting isoforms of C/EBP. EGFP-AZIP also reduces the expression of ATF4, a distant member of the C/EBP family of transcription factors that is homologous to the Aplysia memory suppressor gene ApCREB-2. Consistent with the removal of inhibitory constraints on transcription, we find an increase in the pattern of gene transcripts in the hippocampus of EGFP-AZIP transgenic mice and both a reversibly enhanced hippocampal-based spatial memory and LTP. These results suggest that several proteins within the C/EBP family including ATF4 (CREB-2) act to constrain long-term synaptic changes and memory formation. Relief of this inhibition lowers the threshold for hippocampal-dependent long-term synaptic potentiation and memory storage in mice.
S447X, a serine substitution by a stop codon on base 99 of exon 9 of the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) gene, has beneficial effects on blood lipids. Other LPL alleles are associated with lipid levels, but whether one of these variants predominates remains elusive. We performed a systematic survey to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in all 10 LPL exons and flanking regions by resequencing the gene in 95 subjects. Of 24 variants, 14 were common (> or = 3%). We assayed the common SNPs in 186 cases with atherogenic lipid profiles (low HDL, high LDL) and 185 nonatherogenic controls (high HDL, low LDL). Only S447X and exons 6 (base +73) and 10 (base -11) were individually associated with case-control status (P<0.05, adjusted for major nongenetic covariates with known lipid effects). There were no significant SNP x gender interactions. In adjusted multi-SNP and haplotypic analyses, S447X was interpretable as the sole predictor, with a 2-3-fold reduction in the odds of being atherogenic vs. nonatherogenic (adjusted OR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.21-0.73). S447X and base -11 of exon 10 were statistically interchangeable because they are strongly associated (r=0.92, P<0.0001), but we posit that the LPL association with lipid profile is more likely attributable to the functional S447X rather than the nonfunctional exon 10 SNP. It appears that the S447X variant of LPL may be another rare example (like APOE4, factor V-Leiden, and PPAR gamma Pro12Ala) of a common variant predisposing to a common disorder.
This study explored the genetic basis of the combination of extreme blood levels of HDL-C and LDL-C, a well-studied endophenotype for CVD, which has several attractive features as a target for genetic analysis: (1) the trait is moderately heritable; (2) non-genetic risk factors account for a significant but still limited portion of the phenotypic variance; (3) it is known to be moderated by a number of gene products. We exhaustively surveyed 11 candidate genes for allelic variation in a random population-based sample characterized for known CVD risk factors and blood lipid profiles. With the goal of generating specific etiological hypotheses, we compared two groups of subjects with extreme lipid phenotypes, from the same source population, using a case-control design. Cases (n=186) were subjects, within the total sample of 1708 people, who scored in the upper tertile of LDL-C and the lowest tertile of HDL-C, while controls (n=185) scored in the lowest tertile of LDL-C and the upper tertile of HDL-C. We used logistic regression and a four-tiered, systematic model building strategy with internal cross-validation and bootstrapping to investigate the relationships between the trait and 275 genetic variants in the presence of 10 non-genetic risk factors. Our results implicate a subset of nine genetic variants, spanning seven candidate genes, together with five environmental risk factors, in the etiology of extreme lipoprotein phenotypes. We propose a model involving these 14 genetic and non-genetic risk factors for evaluation in future independent studies.