A case report of youth-onset lipoprotein glomerulopathy with APOE Chicago mutation
Yuhao Liu, Yaqi Cheng, Yubing Wen, Chao Li, Gang Chen, Mingxi Li

TL;DR
A rare case of kidney disease caused by a genetic mutation in a young Chinese man is reported, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis and treatment.
Contribution
This is one of only six reported cases of lipoprotein glomerulopathy associated with the APOE Chicago mutation worldwide.
Findings
The patient showed nephrotic syndrome, hyperlipidemia, and elevated ApoE levels, confirmed by renal biopsy and genetic sequencing.
The APOE Chicago mutation was inherited from the patient’s mother, who did not show symptoms, indicating incomplete penetrance.
Lipid-lowering treatments partially controlled the patient’s symptoms and improved his condition.
Abstract
This article reports an extremely rare case of lipoprotein glomerulopathy (LPG) with apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) Chicago mutation in a young Chinese male. Only five cases or families with APOE Chicago mutations have been reported in the literature. The young male patient is manifested with nephrotic syndrome, accompanied by hyperlipidemia with a preferable increase in triglycerides and elevated ApoE level. Renal biopsy of the patient showed highly dilated glomerular capillaries filled with vacuolar lipids, segmentally fused podocyte foot processes, vacuolar degeneration of renal tubular epithelial cells and absence of electron-dense material, which indicates the diagnosis of LPG. Whole-exome gene sequencing identified the heterozygous mutation of NM_000041.4:c.494G > C (p.Arg165Pro), which is in the exon 4 of the APOE gene and also known as APOE Chicago mutation, a rare mutation of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRenal Diseases and Glomerulopathies · Lipoproteins and Cardiovascular Health · Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes
