Comparative Genetic Analysis of Different Forms of Low-Renin Arterial Hypertension

2008 
Arterial hypertension (AH) ranks among the most widespread cardiovascular diseases and is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. Except for rare monogenic forms, AH is polygenic, and an important role in AH predisposition belongs to genes of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Low renin activity in blood plasma is observed in 20–25% of AH cases (low-renin form of AH), while aldosterone production can be elevated (hyperaldosteronism, HA) or normal in these cases. Several polymorphisms of the genes coding for the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system components were studied in patients with low-renin AH forms: primary HA, idiopathic HA, and AH with a normal aldosterone level. The chimeric CYP11B2/CYP11B1 gene, causing monogenic familial HA type 1, was absent from all HA cases studied. The patient groups were compared with respect to the allele and genotype frequency distributions of the polymorphisms of several genes (CYP11B2 (C-344T), REN (C-5434T, C-5312T, and A BglI G), AGT (Thr174Met), ACE (I/D), CMA (G-1903A), AT2R1 (A1166C)), and their combinations. Analysis of the carriership of the allele and genotype combinations implicated CYP11B2, REN, ACE, CMA, and AT2R1 in low-renin HA. The results revealed both similar and different features in the genetic nature of different low-renin AH forms. Investigation of the genetic predisposition to clinically heterogeneous forms of polygenic diseases by comparing patient groups, formed in accordance with peculiarities of the disease course, holds much promise for understanding their hereditary background.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    39
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []