Multiple genes for essential-hypertension susceptibility on chromosome 1q. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Essential hypertension, defined as elevated levels of blood pressure (BP) without any obvious cause, is a major risk factor for coronary heart disease, stroke, and renal disease. BP levels and susceptibility to development of essential hypertension are partially determined by genetic factors that are poorly understood. Similar to other efforts to understand complex, non-Mendelian phenotypes, genetic dissection of hypertension-related traits employs genomewide linkage analyses of families and association studies of patient cohorts, to uncover rare and common disease alleles, respectively. Family-based mapping studies of elevated BP cover the large intermediate ground for identification of genes with common variants of significant effect. Our genomewide linkage and candidate-gene-based association studies demonstrate that a replicated linkage peak for BP regulation on human chromosome 1q, homologous to mouse and rat quantitative trait loci for BP, contains at least three genes associated with BP levels in multiple samples: ATP1B1, RGS5, and SELE. Individual variants in these three genes account for 2-5-mm Hg differences in mean systolic BP levels, and the cumulative effect reaches 8-10 mm Hg. Because the associated alleles in these genes are relatively common (frequency >5%), these three genes are important contributors to elevated BP in the population at large.

publication date

  • December 20, 2006

Research

keywords

  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1
  • Genetic Linkage
  • Genome, Human
  • Hypertension

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC1785356

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 33846593313

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1093/nar/14.7.2833

PubMed ID

  • 17236131

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 80

issue

  • 2