Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011881 (
diabetic nephropathy
)
10,836
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Genetic factors contribute significantly to the development of
diabetic nephropathy
in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This report discusses some models of
diabetic nephropathy
that incorporate genetic susceptibility and presents strategies for identifying the responsible genes. To identify variation at a locus, newly developed methods are discussed that employ denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis to study sequence differences in both polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA fragments and genomic DNA. These techniques are illustrated with studies of the
angiotensinogen
gene and the insulin receptor gene. In preliminary data from a comparison between individuals with and without
diabetic nephropathy
, no DNA sequence difference in that part of the
angiotensinogen
gene that codes for angiotensin I was found. However, with a probe corresponding to exons 7 and 8 of the insulin receptor gene and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of Rsal digestions of genomic DNA, different distributions of a DNA polymorphism were found in patients with fast as compared with slowly progressing nephropathy. The interpretation of this finding and the need for further studies are discussed. In conclusion, the advent of methods of molecular genetics makes possible studies on genetic determinants of
diabetic nephropathy
. However, more clinical and epidemiologic data are needed to find out how many genes are involved and how they interact with exposure to diabetes. Foremost, DNA from families with two or more siblings with
diabetic nephropathy
must be collected to permit the necessary genetic studies.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic approaches to the identification of genes involved in the development of nephropathy in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 145 65
It has been hypothesized that the renin-angiotensin system plays a pathophysiologic role in the renal hemodynamic abnormalities that occur in diabetes mellitus and thereby contributes to the development of
diabetic nephropathy
. In this study, the tissue-specific regulation of renin and
angiotensinogen
mRNA levels and the abundance of glomerular angiotensin II receptors were examined in male Sprague-Dawley rats (160 to 240 g) made diabetic with streptozotocin. One subgroup of diabetic rats remained untreated, whereas a second diabetic subgroup received twice-daily doses of insulin to ameliorate hyperglycemia. Animals were euthanized 2 wk after the induction of diabetes. Mean plasma glucose levels at the time of euthanasia were significantly elevated in the untreated diabetic animals when compared with controls or insulin-treated diabetic rats. Weight gain was similar in control and insulin-treated diabetic rats, whereas the untreated diabetic rats gained significantly less. Plasma renin concentration did not differ between control, diabetic, and insulin-treated diabetic groups. In the kidney, no significant differences were found in either
angiotensinogen
or renin mRNA levels in diabetic animals, whereas glomerular angiotensin II receptors were significantly less abundant in untreated rats as compared with control or insulin-treated diabetic subgroups. Angiotensinogen mRNA levels were significantly lower in the livers and adrenals of diabetic rats in comparison to those in controls and insulin-treated diabetic rats, whereas
angiotensinogen
mRNA levels in the brain remained unaltered.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The renin-angiotensin system in streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus in the rat. 813 Mar 60
Genotypic abnormalities of the renin-ANG system have been suggested as a risk factor for the development of
diabetic nephropathy
. Cleavage of
angiotensinogen
is the rate-limiting step in the activation of the renin-ANG system. The TT genotype of a polymorphism encoding threonine instead of methionine (M235T) has been associated not only with increased plasma
angiotensinogen
concentration but also with essential hypertension. In addition, a polymorphism in the
angiotensinogen
gene substituting methionine for threonine (T174M) has been associated with hypertension in nondiabetic populations. We studied the relationship between these polymorphisms in the
angiotensinogen
gene in IDDM patients with
diabetic nephropathy
(121 men, 74 women, age 40.9 +/- 10 years, diabetes duration 27 +/- 8 years). There was no difference in M235T genotype distribution between IDDM patients with
diabetic nephropathy
and those with normoalbuminuria: 73/97/25 (37/50/13%) vs. 67/95/23 (36/52/12%) had MM/MT/TT genotypes, respectively. No difference in distribution of T174M genotypes between nephropathic and normoalbuminuric IDDM patients was observed either: 148/44/1 (77/23/0.5%) vs. 141/42/2 (76/23/1%) had TT/TM/MM genotypes, respectively. In patients with nephropathy, systolic blood pressure was higher (161 +/- 22 mmHg [mean +/- SD]) in patients carrying TT genotype of the M235T
angiotensinogen
polymorphism as compared with patients with MM or MT genotypes (150 +/- 23 mmHg; P = 0.03). We conclude that neither the M235T nor the T174M polymorphism in the
angiotensinogen
gene contributes to genetic susceptibility to
diabetic nephropathy
in white IDDM patients, whereas the TT genotype of the M235T is associated with elevated blood pressure in patients with
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Angiotensinogen gene polymorphisms in IDDM patients with diabetic nephropathy. 859 44
To investigate predictive genetic markers for
diabetic nephropathy
, we studied the genetic polymorphisms of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and
angiotensinogen
(
AGN
) in Japanese subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) with and without nephropathy. Genotype distributions were studied in 132 unrelated NIDDM patients of three groups with normoalbuminuria ([Normo] n = 53), microalbuminuria ([Micro] n = 54), and macroalbuminuria ([Macro] n = 25). The ACE insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism of intron 16 was identified by polymerase chain reaction, and the
AGN
M235T polymorphism was identified by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. There were no significant associations between
AGN
235 allele or genotype and
diabetic nephropathy
. The D allele of ACE was significantly more frequent in the Micro (P = .003) and Macro (P = .009) group than in the Normo group. Overall frequencies of the ACE genotype did not differ significantly between the Micro and Macro groups. There were significant relationships between I/D polymorphism and plasma ACE activity; the DD genotype had the highest activity. A multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that the D allele is a strong and independent risk factor for abnormal albuminuria in NIDDM patients. These results suggested that ACE I/D polymorphism, but not
AGN
M235T polymorphism, is a possible genetic risk factor for
diabetic nephropathy
in Japanese NIDDM patients.
...
PMID:Association analyses of the polymorphisms of angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensinogen genes with diabetic nephropathy in Japanese non-insulin-dependent diabetics. 859 93
Recent studies have suggested that an inherited predisposition to essential hypertension may increase susceptibility to nephropathy for patients with IDDM. Essential hypertension has been linked to the
angiotensinogen
(
AGT
) gene in genetic linkage studies in American and European populations. A molecular variant (M235T), which has a functional effect, has been described with highest plasma
AGT
levels being associated with the TT genotype. In a case-control study, we have evaluated the role of this functional genetic marker in patients with IDDM and nephropathy and in IDDM patients without nephropathy. We studied 195 IDDM patients, of whom 95 had established
diabetic nephropathy
; the remaining 100 patients, who had no evidence of microalbuminuria, served as control subjects. All patients were whites born in Northern Ireland. The point mutation in the
AGT
gene was analyzed using restriction typing. The background frequency of the M235T variant was assessed in 80 healthy blood donors, and the TT genotype was present in 9%. This genotype occurred in 8% of control IDDM patients without nephropathy and 19% of IDDM patients with nephropathy (P = 0.025). The odds ratio for
diabetic nephropathy
associated with the TT genotype was 2.7 (95% CI 1.04-7.52). There was no relationship between blood pressure and
AGT
genotypes in the control group. We cannot exclude the possibility that the observed association in the nephropathy group is due to an association between
AGT
genotype and hypertension. This evidence may help to explain the predisposition to
diabetic nephropathy
afforded by hypertension and merits further investigation.
...
PMID:A molecular variant of angiotensinogen is associated with diabetic nephropathy in IDDM. 877 23
Premature cardiovascular disease is common in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients who develop
diabetic nephropathy
. Genetic polymorphism within the renin-angiotensin system has been implicated in the aetiology of a number of cardiovascular disorders; these loci are therefore candidate genes for susceptibility to diabetic renal disease. We have examined the angiotensin converting enzyme insertion/deletion polymorphism and
angiotensinogen
methionine 235 threonine polymorphism in a large cohort of Caucasian patients with IDDM and
diabetic nephropathy
. Patients were classified as having nephropathy by the presence of persistent dipstick positive proteinuria (in the absence of other causes), retinopathy and hypertension (n = 242). Three groups were examined for comparison: ethnically matched non-diabetic subjects (n = 187); a geographically defined cohort of newly diagnosed diabetic patients (n = 341); and IDDM patients with long duration of disease (> 15 years) and no evidence of overt nephropathy (n = 166). No significant difference was seen in distribution of angiotensin converting enzyme or
angiotensinogen
genotypes between IDDM patients with nephropathy and recently diagnosed diabetic subjects (p = 0.282 and 0.584, respectively), nor the long-duration non-nephropathy diabetic subjects (p = 0.701 and 0.190, respectively). We conclude that these genetic loci are unlikely to influence susceptibility to
diabetic nephropathy
in IDDM in the United Kingdom.
...
PMID:Examination of two genetic polymorphisms within the renin-angiotensin system: no evidence for an association with nephropathy in IDDM. 887 96
Diabetic nephropathy
is a clinical syndrome characterized by persistent albuminuria, a relentless decline in GFR, raised arterial blood pressure, and increased relative mortality for cardiovascular diseases.
Diabetic nephropathy
is a leading cause of end-stage renal failure. The pathogenesis of
diabetic nephropathy
is multifactorial, with contributions from metabolic abnormalities, hemodynamic alterations, and various growth factors and genetic factors. Epidemiologic and family studies have demonstrated that only a subset of the patients develop this complication that family clustering of nephropathy is present, and that ethnicity plays an important role in the risk of developing this kidney disease. Short stature and low birth weight are both associated with increased risk of developing
diabetic nephropathy
, supporting the hypothesis that genetic predisposition or factors operating in utero, in early childhood, or both contribute to the development of
diabetic nephropathy
. Studies elucidating phenotypic markers such as parenteral hypertension and systemic blood pressure elevation have yielded conflicting results. The contribution from elevated blood pressure only plays a minor role in the majority of the patients developing
diabetic nephropathy
. The majority of the studies have demonstrated increased sodium/lithium countertransport activity in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients with nephropathy, whereas studies of this phenotypic marker in parents of patients with and without nephropathy have yielded conflicting results. Recently, studies of genetic markers involved in the regulation of blood pressure and levels of cardiovascular risk factors have been conducted. Several studies have demonstrated that the deletion polymorphism in the angiotensin-I-converting enzyme acts as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in diabetic patients. However, a meta-analysis does not support the suggestion that this factor plays any role for the initiation of
diabetic nephropathy
. Similar negative results have been obtained in relation to polymorphisms of the genes encoding for
angiotensinogen
and the angiotensin II Type 1 receptor. However, studies in diabetic and non-diabetic glomerulopathies have clearly demonstrated a deleterious effect of the deletion polymorphism in the angiotensin-converting enzyme on the progression of kidney function.
...
PMID:Genetics of diabetic nephropathy. 898 28
Recent studies have suggested an association between a deletion (D) variant of the angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) gene and
diabetic nephropathy
. However, this finding has not been confirmed by all investigators. Furthermore, an M235T variant of the
angiotensinogen
(
AGT
) gene has been associated with hypertension, an important risk factor for the development and progression of
diabetic nephropathy
. The objective of our study was therefore to examine the relationship between these genetic variants of the renin-angiotensin system and
diabetic nephropathy
and hypertension, respectively, in a large (n = 661) group of Caucasian patients with insulin-dependent (n = 360) or non-insulin-dependent (n = 301) diabetes mellitus. The study had a power of 0.8 to detect a doubling of risk of nephropathy or hypertension in patients with the ACE-DD or
AGT
-235TT genotype, respectively. Allelic frequencies of the ACE-D and
AGT
-235T alleles were similar between patients with and without nephropathy in either type of diabetes, and accordingly, there was no significant association between
diabetic nephropathy
and the ACE or
AGT
genotype. Likewise, there was no significant association between the ACE or
AGT
genotype and hypertension. Thus, our data, in this large and ethnically homogeneous group of patients, do not support the hypothesis that these genetic variants of the renin-angiotensin system are strongly associated with either nephropathy or hypertension in patients with insulin-dependent or non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. These genetic markers are therefore unlikely to serve as clinically useful predictors of either nephropathy or hypertension in Caucasian patients with diabetes.
...
PMID:Genetic variants of the renin-angiotensin system, diabetic nephropathy and hypertension. 904 80
Diabetic nephropathy
is a glomerular disease due to uncontrolled diabetes and genetic factors. It can be caused by glomerular hypertension produced by capillary vasodilation, due to diabetes, against constitutional glomerular resistance. As angiotensin II increases glomerular pressure, we studied the relationship between genetic polymorphisms in the renin-angiotensin system-angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE),
angiotensinogen
(
AGT
), and angiotensin II, subtype 1, receptor-and the renal involvement of insulin-dependent diabetic subjects with proliferative retinopathy: those exposed to the risk of nephropathy due to diabetes. Of 494 subjects recruited in 17 centers in France and Belgium (GENEDIAB Study), 157 (32%) had no nephropathy, 104 (21%) incipient (microalbuminuria), 126 (25 %) established (proteinuria), and 107 (22%) advanced (plasma creatinine > or = 150 micromol/liter or renal replacement therapy) nephropathy. The severity of renal involvement was associated with ACE insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism: chi2 for trend 5.135, P = 0.023; adjusted odds ratio attributable to the D allele 1.889 (95% CI 1.209-2.952, P = 0.0052). Renal involvement was not directly linked to other polymorphisms. However, ACE I-D and
AGT
M235T polymorphisms interacted significantly (P = 0.0166): in subjects with ACE ID and DD genotypes, renal involvement increased from the
AGT
MM to TT genotypes. Thus, genetic determinants that affect renal angiotensin II and kinin productions are risk factors for the progression of glomerular disease in uncontrolled insulin-dependent diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Contribution of genetic polymorphism in the renin-angiotensin system to the development of renal complications in insulin-dependent diabetes: Genetique de la Nephropathie Diabetique (GENEDIAB) study group. 912 2
Hypertension and diabetes mellitus are common chronic conditions which frequently coexist.
Diabetic nephropathy
is a major cause of elevated blood pressure in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM).
Diabetic nephropathy
, arterial sclerosis, obesity and association of essential hypertension can be the causes of hypertension in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has revealed that the nocturnal fall of blood pressure is blunted in patients with
diabetic nephropathy
. A blunted diurnal blood pressure variation is seen in microalbuminuric diabetic patients and even in some normoalbuminuric patients. Accumulating data suggest that normalisation of blood pressure in hypertensive IDDM patients is most important to minimise the loss of kidney function. Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have been reported to be effective in postponing the development of nephropathy and in slowing its progression. Whether only ACE inhibitors have such beneficial renal effects on
diabetic nephropathy
is under discussion. While many studies have suggested that insulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia are related to an elevated blood pressure in hypertensive patients, there does not seem to be enough evidence to prove that insulin per se can raise blood pressure in humans. Neither an insulin infusion within a physiological range nor sustained hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance (e.g. patients with insulinoma, cystic ovary syndrome) have been associated with an elevated blood pressure. Insulin resistance in some hypertensive patients may be a consequence of a decreased blood flow due to an increased peripheral resistance. Preliminary evidence suggests that low birth weight or impaired fetal growth is related to hypertension and NIDDM. Familial clustering of
diabetic nephropathy
suggests the contribution of genetic susceptibility and/or environmental inheritance. The frequent association of nephropathy with hypertension has led to research on the genes related to hypertension (ACE,
angiotensinogen
). Nevertheless, to date no reliable and clinically useful genetic marker has been found. Attempts to correct the metabolic abnormalities derived from diabetes are a new topic in the treatment of
diabetic nephropathy
. The effects of HMG CoA reductase inhibitors (antihypercholesterolaemic drugs), aldose reductase inhibitors (inhibitors of the polyol pathway) and glycation inhibitors (inhibitors of formation of advanced glycosylation end-products) on
diabetic nephropathy
have been evaluated in animal studies and in some clinical trials. Thus far, results with HMG CoA reductase and aldose reductase inhibitors have been somewhat conflicting. The potential therapeutic role of glycation inhibition in the treatment of diabetes deserves further study.
...
PMID:Diabetic nephropathy. Its relationship to hypertension and means of pharmacological intervention. 925 79
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>