Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the Prague hypertensive rat (PHR), a strain of genetic hypertension derived from Wistar, administration of various antihypertensive drugs (AHD) during the developmental phase of hypertension (weeks 5-9 of life) prevents the rise of blood pressure. However, only drugs blocking the renin-angiotensin system (RAS, i.e. AT1-antagonist losartan and ACE inhibitor perindopril) have a long-term effect on blood pressure leading to values of systolic blood pressure (SBP) of 174.5+/-14.5 and 169.8+/-15.3 mmHg, respectively, at week 30. At this time, control, untreated PHR have a SBP of 222.0+/-16.6 mmHg (p<0.01 for both groups); age-matched PNR (Prague normotensive rat, bred in parallel with PHR from the same parent pair) exhibit values as low as 123.3+/-11.7 mmHg (p<0.01 from all other values). When losartan was administered to another group of PHR not only at weeks 5-9 but once more at weeks of 15-19 of age, the values of their SBP at week 30 were 156.8+/-12.64 mmHg, i.e., values significantly (p<0.01) different not only from 239.7+/-17.59 mmHg (value of the untreated PHR group) but also from 174.5+/-14.5 mmHg (value of PHR to which losartan was administered only once, at weeks 5-9). Thus, twice repeated administration of losartan in young age almost normalizes blood pressure deep into adult age. Proteinuria, a common finding in adult PHR, is also significantly lower in adult age in both groups receiving at weeks 5-9 drugs blocking RAS; the values at week 30 are 4.0+/-0.26 mg/24 h/rat in the losartan and 3.87+/-0.27 in the perindopril group, in contrast to 12.8+/-1.08 (p<0.01 for both groups) in control PHR. In conclusion, early brief administration (weeks 5-9 of life) of RAS-blocking agents to PHR led to long-term antihypertensive and antiproteinuric effects. These effects were significantly intensified by a second brief administration at weeks 15-19.
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PMID:Long-term effect on blood pressure of early brief treatment by different antihypertensive agents: a study in the prague hypertensive rat. 993 30

A screening of 22 DNA polymorphisms has been performed in western Mediterranean populations (Iberian Peninsula, Morocco, and Central Mediterranean Islands). The analyzed markers correspond to polymorphic sites in several candidate genes for cardiovascular disease including apolipopoteins and their receptors (APOA1, APOB, APOE, APOC1, APOC2, LPA, and LDLR), genes implied in the hemostasis regulation (Factor VII, alpha and beta-fibrinogen, alpha and beta platelet-integrin, tissue plasminogen activator, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1), and the angiotensin converting enzyme gene. The results are presented of a partial analysis carried out in following population samples: 6 from the Iberian Peninsula, 2 from Morocco, and 3 from Central Islands. The degree of inter-population diversity was significant and consistent with data from other kind of genetic polymorphisms. The apportionment of the allele frequency variance supported a geographic structure into three main regions: Central Mediterranean Islands, the Iberia Peninsula and North Africa. The genetic distance pattern is compatible with a south-to-north North African influence in the Iberian Peninsula and a remarkable gene flow from sub-Saharan Africa into Morocco. Epidemiologically, North Africa is characterized by high frequencies of LPA PNR alleles with high number of repeats (protective for cardiovascular risk) and high frequencies of the APOE*E4 allele (risk factor) as compared with European populations.
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PMID:Molecular variation at functional genes and the history of human populations--data on candidate genes for cardiovascular risk in the Mediterranean. 1474 39