sitosterolaemia ( phytosterolaemia )
Last reviewed 08/2022
- the molecular mechanisms regulating the amount of dietary cholesterol retained
by the body, as well as the body's ability to exclude other dietary sterols
selectively, are poorly understood. An average Western diet will contain approximately
250-500 mg of dietary cholesterol and approximately 200-400 mg of non-cholesterol
sterols, of which plant sterols are the major constituents
- approximately 50-60% of dietary cholesterol is absorbed and retained by the normal human body, but less than 1% of the non-cholesterol sterols are retained. There thus exists a subtle mechanism that allows the body to distinguish between cholesterol and non-cholesterol sterols
- in sitosterolaemia (phytosterolaemia), a rare autosomal recessive disorder,
affected individuals hyperabsorb and retain not only cholesterol but also
all other sterols, including plant and shellfish sterols from the intestine
- consequently, patients with this disease have very high levels of plant sterols in the plasma, and develop tendon and tuberous xanthomas, accelerated atherosclerosis, and premature coronary artery disease
- the STSL locus has been mapped to human chromosome 2p21. Mutations in two tandem ABC genes, ABCG5 and ABCG8, encoding sterolin-1 and -2, respectively, are now known to be mutant in sitosterolemia
Reference:
plant stanols and sterols ( phytosterols ) in lowering cholesterol