Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Previous studies have suggested that the Trp460 allele of the Gly460Trp polymorphism in the alpha-adducin gene is associated with salt sensitivity and primary hypertension. The present study was undertaken to evaluate if the Trp460 allele of this polymorphism is associated with primary hypertension in Scandinavians. To address this issue, 294 patients with primary hypertension and 265 normotensive control subjects from Sweden were examined and genotyped for the Gly460Trp polymorphism using polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism methods. We then used a population of 80 patients with primary hypertension and 154 normotensive control subjects from Finland to replicate the findings. The frequency of the Trp460 allele was lower in hypertensive patients than in normotensive controls in the Swedish population (17.7% vs 23.0%; P = 0.03) and in the Finnish population (14.4% vs 19.5%; NS). Therefore we also performed a pooled analysis in which the frequency of the Trp460 allele was significantly lower in hypertensive patients than in normotensive controls (17.0% vs 21. 7%; P = 0.02). In subjects who did not receive antihypertensive medication (n = 447) there was no difference between carriers of the three different codon 460 genotypes (Trp-Trp; Trp-Gly and Gly-Gly) either for systolic (128 +/- 18; 127 +/- 15 and 129 +/- 17 mm Hg, NS) or for diastolic blood pressure (75.6 +/- 12.1; 74.7 +/- 9.3 and 75.0 +/- 10.4 mm Hg, NS). In conclusion, the lower frequency of the Trp460 allele in hypertensive patients than in normotensive controls strongly argues against a pathogenic role of this allele in primary hypertension. The results rather suggest that another variant in linkage disequilibrium with the Gly460Trp polymorphism increases susceptibility for hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension (2000) 14, 43-46.
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PMID:Role of the Gly460Trp polymorphism of the alpha-adducin gene in primary hypertension in Scandinavians. 1067 30

The study was undertaken to determine whether polymorphic variants of the alpha-adducin gene are associated with isolated systolic hypertension (ISH) in elderly Australian Caucasians. Participants were classified with ISH (n = 87, systolic blood pressure (SBP) > or =160 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) < or =90 mm Hg) or normotension (n = 124, SBP <140 mm Hg and DBP <90 mm Hg with no family history of hypertension). To collect demographic data, a structured questionnaire was used. DNA was extracted using standard techniques from 211 subjects (age range 61-89, mean age 73 +/- 6.6 years, male: female ratio 1.1:1). Genotypes (gly/gly, trp/gly and trp/trp) were assigned in triplicate by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by electrophoresis, using a laser scanning electrophoresis unit. The validity of the method was confirmed by sequencing. Frequencies of allele distribution in ISH or control groups were determined by Chi-square tests and a stepwise logistic regression model, which controlled for potential confounders, was used to examine any independent association between alpha-adducin genotypes or alleles with ISH and normotensive controls. Mean BP (+/- s.d.) was: 170/79.8 +/- 14.9/8.3 mm Hg and 122.1/ 73.4 +/- 8. 8/7.6 mm Hg in the ISH and normotension groups respectively. The unadjusted allele and genotypes frequencies were not significantly different in the ISH patients groups compared with normotensive controls (chi2 = 1.59, P = 0.45 and chi2 = 1.23, P = 0.28 respectively). In this elderly cohort, after adjustment for potential confounders, no statistically significant association was found between alpha-adducin genotype and SBP (P = 0.65 for homozygotes, P = 0.59, for heterozygotes), DBP (P = 0.49 homozygotes, for heterozygotes P = 0.45) pulse pressure (P = 0.87 homozygotes, for heterozygotes P = 0.95) diagnosis of ISH (P = 0.72 for homozygotes, P = 0.68 for heterozygotes). However age and renal disease predicted the diagnosis of ISH (P = 0.001, P = 0.459, respectively), a large pulse pressure (P < 0.0001, P = 0.033, respectively) and a higher SBP (P < 0.0001, P = 0.025, respectively) in this large cohort of elderly Australian Caucasian volunteers. Journal of Human Hypertension (2000) 14, 199-203.
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PMID:The 460Trp polymorphism of the human alpha-adducin gene is not associated with isolated systolic hypertension in elderly Australian Caucasians. 1069 35

Genetic variation in adducin, a protein associated with the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane, may be in part responsible for salt-sensitive hypertension. In the Netherlands, 560 men who survived a myocardial infarction and 646 men who had undergone an orthopaedic intervention participated in a case-control study. In men in this study, the alpha-adducin polymorphism was not associated with the risk of myocardial infarction either among those with or among those without a clinical history of hypertension. In a cross-sectional analysis of blood pressure data from the controls, the alpha-adducin polymorphism was associated neither with self-reported hypertension (OR = 0.78, 95% CI = 0.51-1.19) nor with mean levels of systolic or diastolic blood pressure. Additional studies in other populations are needed to assess the contribution of alpha-adducin to high blood pressure and cardiovascular risk.
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PMID:Association of the alpha-adducin polymorphism with blood pressure and risk of myocardial infarction. 1072 14

Population-based candidate gene association analyses are becoming increasingly popular as a result of a greater number of genes and gene polymorphisms having been identified for which some functional information is available. Because many biochemical and physiologic systems impact blood pressure regulation and hypertension susceptibility, many of these identified genes and polymorphisms are candidates for population-level association studies involving blood pressure levels or hypertension status. Recent studies have suggested that the alpha-adducin gene may harbor polymorphisms that influence blood pressure level. Therefore, we embarked on a study to test one such polymorphism in two large US samples: one from an urban African American population (Maywood, IL) and another from a rural white population (Tecumseh, MI). We used both family-based association tests and tests that consider the impact of additional measured factors beyond adducin gene variation on blood pressure levels. We found no evidence for a significant effect of the chosen adducin polymorphism on blood pressure variation in either sample. We also found no association between Adducin genotypes and antihypertensive use. These facts, together with similar findings in companion studies, suggest that the alpha-adducin gene polymorphism does not have a pronounced effect on blood pressure variation in the populations studied. This does not suggest, however, that the alpha-adducin gene does not have a role in blood pressure regulation and hypertension susceptibility.
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PMID:Lack of association between a biallelic polymorphism in the adducin gene and blood pressure in whites and African Americans. 1091 63

In Milan hypertensive rats, a variant in the alpha-adducin gene has been shown to account for approximately 50% of the interindividual variation in blood pressure levels between these animals and their normotensive counterparts. Additional studies have suggested that a polymorphism within exon 10 of the human alpha-adducin gene (Gly-460-Trp) may be associated with hypertension and salt sensitivity. On the basis of these observations, we investigated variation within or near the human alpha-adducin gene for linkage and association with a locus influencing blood pressure levels in 281 nuclear families (774 siblings aged 5 to 37 years; 380 parents aged 26 to 57 years), selected from the white population of Rochester, Minnesota, without regard to health. Sib pair linkage analyses (n = 852 sibling pairs) using a dinucleotide repeat marker (D4S43) that maps approximately 660 kb from the alpha-adducin gene provided no evidence of linkage between this marker locus and a locus influencing systolic, diastolic, or mean blood pressure levels. Allele frequencies for the Gly-460-Trp polymorphism were similar to those reported in other white populations (Gly = 0.812, Trp = 0.188); however, this polymorphism was not associated with any measure of blood pressure level in either parents or siblings. Therefore, variation within the alpha-adducin gene does not appear to have a major influence on measures of blood pressure in white families from Rochester, Minnesota.
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PMID:Association and linkage analysis of the alpha-adducin gene and blood pressure. 1091 63

Recent studies have found the tryptophan allele of a glycine to tryptophan polymorphism at position 460 (G460W) of the alpha-adducin protein to be associated with essential hypertension in European populations. We examined whether the tryptophan allele is associated with hypertension in a different population, comprised of subjects of Chinese origin from Taiwan, and Chinese and Japanese origin from the San Francisco Bay area and Hawaii. We adapted the 5' allelic discrimination assay or TaqMan to type individuals for the G460W polymorphism, and using this method we typed more than 1000 individuals. The frequency of the W allele was slightly increased in the treated subjects in the Chinese population (0.458 v 0.423) but not the Japanese population (0.549 v 0.558). We considered dominant, recessive, and additive models in our analysis. There was a significant result for a recessive model for systolic blood pressure in the Chinese population (chi2 6.84, df = 2, P < .05), but only suggestive evidence for diastolic blood pressure (chi2 3.30). In contrast, in the Japanese population, there was no evidence for a positive association under any model. For the combined Chinese and Japanese samples, the evidence for association with alpha-adducin was not significant.
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PMID:Lack of evidence for an association between alpha-adducin and blood pressure regulation in Asian populations. 1091 63

This report from the HyperGEN Study, one of four networks participating in the NHLBI-sponsored Family Blood Pressure Program, presents the results of an association study based on 822 white and 572 black subjects (cases and controls) participating in the HyperGEN Network from five geographically diverse field centers. All cases met the Joint National Committee on Detection and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC VI) criteria for hypertension (Stage I or higher). Each subject was clinically examined for risk factors for hypertension as well as genotyped for the point mutation Gly460Trp at the alpha-adducin locus on chromosome 4p. In the white group, the prevalence of genotypes with one or more Trp alleles was 26% in normotensives, versus 33% in hypertensives randomly selected from the population, and 39% among the multiply affected hypertensive sibships. Overall, in whites, the Trp allele significantly increased the odds of hypertension (P = .0056), with an odds ratio (OR) of 1.73 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.17, 2.54). The alpha-adducin gene remained a significant independent predictor of hypertension in a multivariate logistic model even after correcting for other risk factors for hypertension, including gender, age, body mass index (BMI), smoking, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, urine sodium (Na), and urine potassium (K), (OR = 1.55, 95% CI = 1.03, 2.34). Through the use of regression trees, several gene-by-environment interactions were implicated, suggesting that alpha-adducin appears to be a particularly important risk factor (OR = 4.2) for older (age > 60.5 years), less lean (BMI < 25.8 kg/m2) subjects with moderately high triglycerides (between 145.5 and 218.5 mg/dL). In the black group, the relationship was less clear. Overall, it was protective against hypertension. The prevalence of genotypes with one or more Trp alleles was 24% among normotensive versus 11% in hypertensive black subjects randomly selected from the population, and 13% among multiply affected hypertensive sibships, resulting in an OR of 0.48 (P = .0231; 95% CI = 0.25, 0.90). However, the Trp genotype was no longer a significant independent predictor of hypertension risk in the multivariate logistic model (OR = 0.79; 95% CI = 0.37, 1.67), suggesting that it may be operating through one or more of these other factors. Thus, we conclude that the alpha-adducin gene is a significant, independent risk factor for hypertension in whites, but not in blacks, and may play a particularly important role for subjects with certain constellations of other risk factors.
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PMID:Association between the alpha-adducin gene and hypertension in the HyperGEN Study. 1091 63

The alpha-adducin gene contributes significantly to hypertension in MHS rats (rats of the Milan hypertensive strain) and in some white and Japanese populations, causing a low renin, sodium, and diuretic-sensitive hypertension. No data are available from populations of African ancestry who have a high prevalence of low renin, sodium, and diuretic-sensitive hypertension. We studied the relationship between the 460-Trp variant of alpha-adducin gene with hypertension using a case-control study design in black South Africans. Surprisingly we found that the overall frequency of the 460-Trp allele was low (approximately 6%), but in spite of such relatively low frequency, the 460-Trp allele was 2.5-fold more frequent in hypertensives than normotensives (P = .028), with an odds ratio for hypertension associated to the state of carrier of at least one 460-Trp allele of 2.68. The finding of such low frequency of the 460-Trp allele in individuals of African ancestry points to the substantial ethnic variability of the genes that have been found to be associated with hypertension. On the other hand, it suggests an association of the 460-Trp allele with hypertension also in subjects of African origin.
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PMID:Alpha-adducin polymorphism in hypertensives of South African ancestry. 1091 63

Polymorphic variants of the cytoskeletal protein adducin have been associated with hypertension in humans and rats. However, the direct role of this protein in modulating arterial blood pressure has never been demonstrated. To assess the effect of beta-adducin on blood pressure, a beta-adducin-deficient mouse strain (-/-) was studied and compared with wild-type controls (+/+). Aortic blood pressure was measured in nonanesthetized, freely moving animals with the use of telemetry implants. It is important to note that these mice have at least 98% of C57Bl/6 genetic background, with the only difference from wild-type animals being the beta-adducin mutation. We found statistically significant higher levels of systolic blood pressure (mm Hg) (mean+/-SE values: -/-: 126.94+/-1.14, n=5; +/+: 108.06+/-2. 34, n=6; P:</=0.0001), diastolic blood pressure (-/-: 83.54+/-1.07; +/+: 74.87+/-2.23; P:</=0.005), and pulse blood pressure (-/-: 43. 32+/-1.10; +/+: 33.19+/-1.96; P:</=0.001) in beta-adducin-deficient mice. Western blot analysis showed that as a result of the introduced genetic modification, beta-adducin was not present in heart protein extracts from -/- mice. Consequently, this deficiency produced a sharp decrease of alpha-adducin and a lesser reduction in gamma-adducin levels. However, we found neither cardiac remodeling nor modification of the heart function in these animals. This is the first report showing direct evidence that hypertension is triggered by a mutation in the adducin gene family.
Hypertension 2000 Sep
PMID:Hypertension in beta-adducin-deficient mice. 1098 80

In a previous study, by using a candidate gene approach, we detected in both Milan hypertensive rats and humans a polymorphism in the alpha-adducin gene (ADD1) that was associated with blood pressure and renal sodium handling. In the present study, a genomewide search with 264 informative markers was undertaken in 251 (Milan hypertensive strain x Milan normotensive strain) F2 rats to further investigate the contribution of the adducin gene family (Add1, Add2, and Add3) and to identify novel quantitative trait loci (QTLs) that affect blood pressure. The influence of 2 different methods of blood pressure measurement, the intracarotid catheter and the tail-cuff method, was also evaluated. We found evidence that QTLs affected systolic blood pressure (SBP) measured at the carotid (direct SBP) on rat chromosome 1 with a logarithm of the odds (LOD) score peak of 3.3 on D1Rat121 and on rat chromosome 14 on Add1 locus (LOD=3.2). A QTL for SBP measured at the tail (indirect SBP) was found on rat chromosome 10 around D10Rat33 (LOD=5.0). All of these QTLs identified chromosomal regions not detected in other rat studies and harbor genes (Na(+)/H(+) exchanger A3; alpha-adducin; alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptor) that may be involved in blood pressure regulation. Therefore, these findings may be relevant to human hypertension, also in consideration of the biochemical and pathophysiological similarities between MHS and a subgroup of patients of primary hypertension, which led to the identification of alpha-adducin as a candidate gene in both species.
Hypertension 2000 Nov
PMID:Genetic mapping of blood pressure quantitative trait loci in Milan hypertensive rats. 1108 36


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