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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Maternal protein deficiency during pregnancy is associated with changes in glucose tolerance and
hypertension
in the offspring of rats. In this study the growth of rat fetuses was examined when the dams were fed diets containing 18% casein, 9% casein or 8% casein supplemented with threonine. The extra threonine was added to reverse the decrease in circulating threonine concentrations that occurs when pregnant rats are fed protein-deficient diets. The fetuses of the group fed the low protein diet supplemented with threonine were significantly smaller than those of the control group and not significantly different from those fed low protein. Homogenates prepared from the livers of dams fed the diet containing 9% casein oxidized threonine at approximately twice the rate of homogenates prepared from dams fed the diet containing 18% casein. We conclude that circulating levels of threonine fall as a consequence of an increase in the activity of the pathway that metabolizes homocysteine produced by the transulfuration of
methionine
. Serum homocysteine was unaffected in the dams fed low protein diets compared with controls, but was significantly greater in dams fed the low protein diet supplemented with threonine. Elevated levels of homocysteine are associated with changes in the methylation of DNA. The endogenous methylation of DNA was greater than that of controls in the livers of fetuses from dams fed the 9% protein diets and increased further when the diet was supplemented with threonine. Our results suggest that changes in
methionine
metabolism increase homocysteine production, which leads to changes in DNA methylation in the fetus. An increase in maternal homocysteine may compromise fetal development, leading to the onset of glucose intolerance and
hypertension
in adult life.
...
PMID:Maternal protein deficiency causes hypermethylation of DNA in the livers of rat fetuses. 1086 57
The fetal environment is now recognized as a key determinant of the adult phenotype, being linked to development of diseases, including
hypertension
, as well as the timing of puberty. Such links may be related, in part, to the level of fetal exposure to maternal glucocorticoids in utero, which is normally regulated by placental expression of the enzyme 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD). The present study examined whether manipulation of fetal glucocorticoid exposure, either directly or indirectly via 11beta-HSD inhibition, influences the subsequent timing of puberty. Administration of dexamethasone acetate at low (LDEX, 0.25 microg/ml drinking water) or high doses (HDEX, 1 microg/ml) or carbenoxolone (CBX, 2 x 10 mg/day, sc; an inhibitor of 11beta-HSD) to pregnant rats from day 13 to term (day 23) reduced offspring birthweight (LDEX: 9%; HDEX: 27%; CBX: 8%) and resulted in a subsequent delay in the onset of puberty in females (control: 41.4 +/- 0.5; LDEX: 44.8 +/- 0.7; HDEX: 48.5 +/- 0.4; CBX: 43.6 +/- 0.5 days). Importantly, the effects of CBX were not observed in the absence of maternal adrenals, indicating that they were mediated by increased fetal exposure to endogenous maternal glucocorticoids. In contrast, maternal treatment with metyrapone (
MET
; an inhibitor of glucocorticoid synthesis; 500 microg/ml drinking water from day 13) increased birthweight by 5% and advanced puberty onset in male offspring (control: 48.8 +/- 1.0;
MET
: 45.7 +/- 0.8 days). Changes in the timing of puberty onset were not attributable to changes in either bodyweight at puberty or peripubertal plasma leptin concentrations. Peripubertal plasma LH was also unaffected in animals with delayed puberty but was elevated in male offspring of
MET
-treated mothers. Collectively, these results demonstrate that fetal glucocorticoid exposure is an important determinant of the timing of puberty onset in postnatal life, and that this effect is operable within the normal physiological range of glucocorticoid concentrations.
...
PMID:Increased fetal glucocorticoid exposure delays puberty onset in postnatal life. 1087 42
Traditional risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) can only explain approximately two thirds of the observed clinical events. This has maintained interest in other nutritional and biochemical factors that might contribute to the underlying pathophysiology of vascular disease. Two such factors are dietary antioxidants and plasma homocysteine. Established risk factors such as
hypertension
, smoking and diabetes mellitus are all associated with increased oxidative stresses due to excess free radical activity in the vascular wall. This may facilitate the development of vascular disease because of (i) increased oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles which increases their propensity to deposition in the vascular wall, (ii) inactivation of endothelium-derived nitric oxide, and (iii) direct cytotoxicity to endothelial cells. Protective antioxidant molecules include vitamin C and vitamin E of which the latter is lipid soluble and is the primary antioxidant defence in circulating LDL particles. Epidemiological studies have suggested strongly that individuals who have high circulating concentrations or dietary intake of natural antioxidant vitamins are protected against vascular disease events (18). Furthermore, many studies have demonstrated a beneficial effect of natural and synthetic antioxidants on surrogate markers of vascular disease such as endothelial function and lipoprotein oxidation. However, large prospective randomized controlled intervention trials, mostly involving vitamin E (e.g. CHAOS, HOPE (22)), have failed to demonstrate any beneficial effect upon vascular mortality in high risk individuals. Possible reasons for these disappointing results include the pro-oxidant effects of high dose antioxidant supplements, particularly in patients with established vascular disease. Homocysteine is a sulphydryl-containing amino acid derived from the demethylation of dietary
methionine
. Epidemiological studies over 30 years have shown that increased concentrations of homocysteine are associated with vascular disease. This link is independent of other risk factors, is consistent across many studies and is strongly dose-related. Recently, evidence has accumulated to suggest that this link is also biologically plausible because homocysteine promotes oxidant injury to the vascular endothelium, impairs endothelium-dependent vasomotor regulation and may also alter the coagulant properties of the blood. Plasma homocysteine levels can be reduced by dietary supplements of folic acid and B vitamins. Studies are currently being undertaken to examine the impact of these vitamins in high risk patients and, thereby, establish a causative role for homocysteine in promoting vascular events.
...
PMID:Coronary artery disease--free radical damage, antioxidant protection and the role of homocysteine. 1119 56
A common variant at codon 235 of the angiotensinogen gene with
methionine
to threonine amino acid substitution (AGT M235T) has been reported as a genetic risk for essential hypertension. However, the frequency of AGT T235 was heterogeneous among races, and a positive association between AGT M235T and
hypertension
was not settled. To examine the association in a general population of Japanese (n=4013), we introduced the TaqMan polymerase chain reaction method and examined the relation between
hypertension
and T+31C polymorphism, which was in absolute linkage disequilibrium with AGT M235T. The C+31 allele of AGT was significantly associated with the positive family history of
hypertension
(FH) but not with the presence of
hypertension
or blood pressure. The subjects with CC tended to have hypertensive relatives, especially a hypertensive father or siblings, and its statistical significance was stronger in men. Adjustment of confounding factor did not alter the results of simple association study, suggesting that this positive association with FH is independent and significant. Our findings revealed that the TaqMan polymerase chain reaction method is a powerful tool for genetic association study with a large number of subjects and that AGT T+31C is significantly associated with paternal FH.
Hypertension
2001 Feb
PMID:T+31C polymorphism of angiotensinogen gene and essential hypertension. 1123 Feb 86
Essential hypertension has a familial predisposition, but the phenotype of elevated blood pressure has delayed penetrance. Because the kidney is a crucial determinant of blood pressure homeostasis, we studied early glomerular alterations in still-normotensive young subjects at genetic risk of
hypertension
. Thirty-nine normotensive adults (mean age 29 to 31 years), stratified by genetic risk (parental family history [FH]) of
hypertension
(26 with positive FH [FH+], 13 with negative FH [FH-]), underwent intravenous infusion of mixed amino acids. Before and during amino acid administration, we measured glomerular filtration rate (GFR), putative second messengers of amino acids (nitric oxide [NO.] metabolites and cGMP), serum insulin and amino acid concentrations, and the FE(Li)+ as an index of renal proximal tubular reabsorption. The FH+ group had a blunted GFR rise in response to amino acids (2.43+/-8.16% versus 31.0+/-13.4% rise, P:=0.0126). The amino acid-induced change in GFR correlated (r=0.786, P:<0.01) with the change in urinary NO. metabolite excretion; a diminished rise in urinary NO. metabolite excretion in the FH+ group (P:=0.0105) suggested a biochemical mechanism for the different GFR responses between FH groups: a relative inability to convert arginine to NO. The FH+ group had a far lower initial cGMP excretion at baseline (261+/-21.1 versus 579+/-84.9 nmol. h(-1)/1.73 m(2), P:=0.001), although cGMP did not change during the amino acid infusion (P:=0.703). FH status, baseline GFR, and baseline serum insulin jointly predicted GFR response to amino acids (P:=0.0013), accounting for approximately 45% of the variance in GFR response. Decline in FE(Li)+, an inverse index of proximal tubular reabsorption, paralleled increase in GFR (r=-0.506, P:=0.01), suggesting differences in proximal tubular reabsorption during amino acids between the FH groups. GFR response to amino acid infusion was blunted in the FH+ group despite significantly higher serum concentrations of 6 amino acids (arginine, isoleucine, leucine,
methionine
, phenylalanine, and valine) in the FH+ group, suggesting a novel form of insulin resistance (to the amino acid-translocating action of insulin) in FH+ subjects. We conclude that blunted glomerular filtration reserve in response to amino acids is an early-penetrance phenotype seen even in still-normotensive subjects at genetic risk of
hypertension
and is linked to impaired formation of NO. in the kidney. Corresponding changes in GFR and fractional excretion of Li(+) suggest that altered proximal tubular reabsorption after amino acids is an early pathophysiologic mechanism. Resistance to the amino acid-translocating actions of insulin may play a role in the biological response to amino acids in this setting. This glomerular reserve phenotype may be useful in genetic studies of renal traits preceding or predisposing to
hypertension
.
Hypertension
2001 Mar
PMID:Early alteration in glomerular reserve in humans at genetic risk of essential hypertension: mechanisms and consequences. 1124 15
Placental abruption is due to the rupture of the uterine spiral artery. The placenta separates totally or partially from the uterine wall during pregnancy. This serious syndrome has a great risk for the mother (shock and disseminated intravascular coagulation) and her child (mortality or morbidity). To the known risk factors like
hypertension
, the use of cocaine and smoking, homocysteine is recognized as an independent risk factor for vascular disease and endothelial dysfunction. In contrast to normal pregnancy where the spiral artery endothelium is replaced by trophoblast, the endothelium persists in case of placental abruption. In 165 women with placental vasculopathy and 139 matched controls hyperhomocysteinemia resulted in an odds ratio of 4.7 (95% CI: 1.6-14.0). The C677T mutation gave a risk of 2.5 (95% CI: 1.0-6.0). Even up to 2 or 3 years post-partum evidence could be found of endothelial dysfunction. The combination of hyperhomocysteinemia and thrombotic factors like APC resistance, Protein-C, Protein-S, antithrombin and factor V Leiden increases the risk of placental abruption 3-7 times. The common denominator of the effect of homocysteine on blood vessels could be sited in the process of proliferation of cells that need proper methyl groups for proper function (DNA synthesis and expression). These methyl groups are delivered by D-adenosylmethionine formed from
methionine
after remethylation of homocysteine. The coagulation factors and plasma homocysteine values can be modulated by vitamins, folic acid and folates in particular. To prove the clinical value of folate supplementation placebo-randomized trials are urgently needed: for placebo to be started after the period of neural tube closure.
...
PMID:Clotting disorders and placental abruption: homocysteine--a new risk factor. 1130 Nov 73
It has recently been proposed that primary mutations in genes involved in fatty acid and lipid metabolism may contribute to the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and dyslipidemia often observed in spontaneous forms of
hypertension
. In the current study in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), we mapped and sequenced the gene encoding a key transcription factor known as ADD1 (adipocyte determination and differentiation factor 1) or SREBP-1c (sterol regulatory element binding protein- c) that has recently been identified as a master regulator of genes involved in the hepatic control of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. We found that (1) the gene for ADD1/SREBP-1c maps to a region of rat Chromosome 10 previously reported to contain a quantitative trait locus involved in the regulation of hepatic cholesterol levels and (2) the SHR harbors a valine-to-
methionine
substitution in the COOH terminal portion of the ADD1/SREBP-1 protein that is not present in 44 other strains of laboratory rats. These findings, together with previous studies showing that transgenic expression of SREBP-1 isoforms has major effects on hepatic fatty acid and cholesterol biosynthesis, suggest that naturally occurring variation in the gene encoding the SREBP-1 isoforms might contribute to inherited variation in lipid metabolism in the SHR versus other strains of rats. These results should serve to motivate future transfection studies of the effect of the SHR mutant on SREBP-1 expression and activation in vitro, as well as the development of congenic and transgenic strains of SHR to investigate the effects of different variants of SREBP-1 on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in vivo.
...
PMID:Identification of a mutation in ADD1/SREBP-1 in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. 1130 61
This paper reviews the biochemical and physiological data underlying hyperhomocysteinemia. Elevation of plasma homocysteine arises from disrupted of its metabolism (remethylation to
methionine
and transsulfuration to cystathionine) and is a function of a complex interaction between multiple genetic and environmental factors. Hyperhomocysteinemia, a conditions that recent epidemiological studies have shown to be associated with an increased risk of vascular diseases, may be a equal importance to hypercholesterolemia,
hypertension
and smoking in etiology of atherosclerosis. Based on the role of folic acid, vitamin B12 and B6 in homocysteine metabolism supplementation with these vitamins in treatment of hyperhomocysteinemia both in cardiovascular diseases and neural tube defects is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Homocysteine and hyperhomocysteinemia]. 1139 9
Genetic variability in the renin angiotensin system may modify renal responses to injury and disease progression. We therefore examined whether the insertion/deletion polymorphism of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) gene, the Met235-->Thr polymorphism of the angiotensinogen (AGT) gene, and the A1166-->C polymorphism of the angiotensin II type 1 receptor gene (ATR1) were associated with disease progression and outcome after renal transplantation (Tx) in 100 Caucasian pediatric renal transplant recipients. The observed allele frequencies were: DD 31%, DI 41% and II 28%, for ACE; MM 42%, MT 37% and TT 21%, for the
methionine
(
Met
)235-->threonine (Thr) polymorphism of AGT; and AA 51%, AC 38% and CC 11%, for the adenine (A)1166-->cytosine (C) gene polymorphism. The slope of 1/creatinine was determined by linear regression analysis of a median of 12 points before and after renal Tx, and the population was divided in two equal groups, according to the slope, both before and after Tx. There were no statistically significant differences for AGT, ACE, and ATR1 polymorphisms with regard to the slope of 1/creatinine before renal Tx. After renal Tx, the ACE II genotype (p = 0.024, chi-square test) and the presence of the I allele (p=0.033, chi-square test) were associated with a favorable slope of 1/creatinine. There was no association of the AGT or the ATR1 polymorphism with outcome after renal Tx, and none of the genotypes were associated with
hypertension
before or after renal Tx. We suggest that the beneficial association of disease progression after renal Tx with the II genotype and/or the presence of the I allele in our pediatric cohort might be explained by a lower activity of the circulating ACE enzyme associated with the I allele.
...
PMID:Renin angiotensin system gene polymorphisms in pediatric renal transplant recipients. 1142 18
Many recent case-control studies have suggested a significant relationship between M235T (the substitution of threonine for
methionine
at position 235 codon) polymorphism of the angiotensinogen (AGT) gene and
hypertension
. To investigate whether the M235T polymorphism of AGT gene affects the incidence of
hypertension
, a retrospective cohort study was performed among Japanese workers. The subjects were Japanese workers at an occupational site in Shimane Prefecture in Japan. The baseline data were set at the received regular health examination in 1992, and a retrospective cohort study was performed for analyzing the incidence of
hypertension
in 1998. The rates of M235M (MM), M235T (MT) and T235T (TT) genotypes were 4%, 32% and 64%, respectively. The relative risks of MT and TT against MM for the incidence of
hypertension
by single variance analysis were 1.47 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.50 - 4.33] and 1.35 (95% CI 0.47 - 3.90), respectively. The relative risks of MT and TT against MM for the incidence of
hypertension
, adjusted for sex, age, body mass index, fasting glucose and cigarette smoking, drinking and exercise in 1992, were 1.49 (95% CI 0.49 - 4.53) and 1.25 (95% CI 0.42 3.74), respectively. The data from this study suggest that the M235T polymorphism of AGT gene has a weak role in the manifestation of
hypertension
. Further comprehensive studies are needed to resolve this issue.
...
PMID:Angiotensinogen gene variation and hypertension in a cohort study in Japanese. 1143 22
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