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)

Variegate porphyria (VP), a low-penetrant autosomal dominant inherited disorder of haem metabolism, is characterised by photosensitivity (Fig. 1) and a propensity to develop acute neuropsychiatric attacks with abdominal pain, vomiting, constipation, tachycardia, hypertension, psychiatric symptoms and, in the worst cases, quadriplegia. Acute attacks, often precipitated by inappropriate drug therapy, are potentially fatal. While earlier workers thought the distal haem biosynthetic enzyme ferrochelatase may be involved in the genesis of VP, it was shown in the early 1980's, and is now accepted, that VP is associated with decreased protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity (PPO) (E.C.1.3.3.4). VP prevalence is much higher in South Africa than elsewhere; probably due to a founder effect with patients descending from a 17th century Dutch immigrant. PPO cDNAs from Bacillus subtilis, Myxococcus xanthus, human placenta and mouse liver have been cloned, sequenced and expressed. Human and mouse cDNAs consist of open reading frames 1431 nucleotides long, encoding a 477 amino acid protein. The human PPO gene contains thirteen exons, spanning approximately 4.5 kb. We have identified a C to T transition in codon 59 (in exon 3) resulting in an arginine to tryptophan substitution (R59W). A protein expressed from an in vitro-mutagenized PPO construct exhibits substantially less activity than the wild type. The R59W mutation was present in 43 of 45 patients with VP from 26 of 27 South African families investigated, but not in 34 unaffected relatives or 9 unrelated British patients with PPO deficiency. Since at least one of these families is descended from the founder of South African VP, this defect may represent the founder gene defect associated causally with VP in South Africa.
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PMID:A R59W mutation in human protoporphyrinogen oxidase results in decreased enzyme activity and is prevalent in South Africans with variegate porphyria. 867 6

Bradykinin binds to its receptor at target organs and exerts a wide spectrum of biological activities including vasodilation, smooth muscle contraction and relaxation, pain, and inflammation. To gain a better insight into the physiological function of this potent vasoactive peptide, we created transgenic mice that harbor the human bradykinin B2 receptor transgene under the control of the Rous sarcoma virus 3'-LTR promoter (RSV-cHBKR). Expression of HBKR in these transgenic mice was identified in the aorta, brain, heart, lung, liver, kidney, uterus, and prostate gland by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction Southern blot analysis. Two transgenic mouse lines expressing the human B2 receptor resulted in a significant reduction of blood pressure (84.2 +/- 0.6 mm Hg, n = 28; 76.9 +/- 0.8 mm Hg, n = 24; P < .001) compared with the control littermates (96.9 +/- 0.4 mm Hg, n = 52). Administration of Hoe 140, a bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist, restored the blood pressure of the transgenic mice to normal levels within 1 hour, and the effect diminished within 4 hours. The transgenic mice displayed enhanced blood pressure-lowering effect induced by a bolus intra-aortic injection of kinin and showed increased response in kinin-induced uterine smooth muscle contractility compared with control littermates. These studies show that overexpression of human bradykinin B2 receptor causes a sustained reduction of blood pressure in transgenic mice. They also suggest that the B2 receptor-mediated signal transduction pathway plays a role in blood pressure regulation.
Hypertension 1997 Jan
PMID:Hypotension in transgenic mice overexpressing human bradykinin B2 receptor. 903 47

The tissue kallikrein-kinin system has been postulated to play a role in blood pressure homeostasis and the pathogenesis of clinical hypertension. To demonstrate the potential therapeutic effects of somatic gene delivery in treating hypertension, we used spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) as a model. The gene encoding the human tissue kallikrein was used because of its powerful hypotensive action. The human kallikrein DNA constructs were placed under the control of the metallothionein metal response element, the cytomegalovirus promoter/enhancer or the Rous sarcoma virus 3'-LTR. The human tissue kallikrein DNA constructs were incorporated into adenoviral vectors via homologous recombination. The naked plasmid DNA constructs or adenovirus containing the kallikrein gene were first introduced into kidney 293 cells and the expression of human tissue kallikrein was identified by ELISA. The kallikrein gene was delivered into SHR via intramuscular, intravenous, portal vein, intraperitoneal, and intracerebroventricular routes. A single injection of naked human kallikrein DNA constructs caused a prolonged reduction of high blood pressure for up to 8 weeks. Adenoviral-mediated gene delivery results in high efficiency of human tissue kallikrein expression. Immunoreactive human kallikrein was detected in rat serum at the highest level at 1 day post gene delivery. Portal vein delivery of a reporter gene, AdCMV-LacZ, results in intense staining of beta-galactosidase in rat liver, suggesting that recombinant kallikrein is mainly produced in liver and secreted into the circulation. These results show that kallikrein gene delivery causes a sustained reduction of blood pressure in genetically hypertensive rats and provide important information for a potential gene therapy approach to human hypertension and related diseases.
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PMID:Kallikrein gene therapy: a new strategy for hypertensive diseases. 922 51

Four types of hepatic porphyria (acute intermittent porphyria; hereditary coprophorphyria; variegate porphyria; delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase deficiency porphyria) present clinically with an identical neurological syndrome. Symptoms include severe abdominal pain, vomiting, constipation, hypertension, tachycardia, and bladder dysfunction. These symptoms have been ascribed to autonomic neuropathy. Other symptoms are motor weakness and sensory involvement, which correlate with peripheral axonal neuropathy, and mental symptoms occurring without clear morphological findings in the cerebrum. The pathogenetic mechanisms which lead to the neurological dysfunction have remained poorly understood, partly due to the lack of a suitable animal model of these rare disorders. Two hypotheses, the possible neurotoxicity of delta-aminolevulinate (ALA) and heme deficiency in nervous tissue are discussed and corresponding data from porphobilinogen-deaminase deficient mice are presented. The present evidence suggests that multiple mechanisms interact in causing the varied symptoms, including ALA interaction with GABA receptors, altered tryptophan metabolism, and possibly heme depletion in nerve cells.
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PMID:Acute porphyrias: pathogenesis of neurological manifestations. 951 77

Recently, a molecular variant of alpha-adducin (with tryptophan instead of glycine at amino acid number 460) has been reported to be more common among Italian and French hypertensive individuals than among controls. Moreover, hypertensive individuals with Trp460 exhibit a greater sensitivity to changes in sodium balance and a greater fall in blood pressure in response to diuretic treatment. In the present study, we investigated the association between Gly460Trp polymorphism of the alpha-adducin gene and hypertension in Japanese subjects. The study population comprised 283 subjects enrolled at our outpatient clinic. The subjects were divided into normotensive (NT), borderline (B), and hypertensive (HT) groups. The alpha-adducin genotype was determined by allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization. The genotype frequency of Gly460Trp polymorphism differed significantly among the NT, B, and HT groups (p=0.0113). The GG genotype of the adducin gene was more common in the NT group than in the HT group. Moreover, the Trp460 allele was significantly associated with lower plasma renin activity (p = 0.0075). However, this polymorphism was unrelated to left ventricular mass and height as assessed by echocardiography. The present study suggests that Gly460Trp polymorphism of the a-adducin gene may be involved in hypertension, particularly the low-renin type, in Japanese individuals.
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PMID:Polymorphism of alpha-adducin in Japanese patients with essential hypertension. 958 5

The aim was to identify potentially treatable risk factors for cerebral white matter lesions often found on MRI in elderly persons. findings were assessed on 1.0 T MRI of 178 subjects living in the community and aged 60 years or older. Participants underwent standardised evaluations including standard questionnaires, a physical and neurological examination, cognitive function tests, electrocardiogram, a complete blood chemistry panel, and plasma amino acid measurements. Brain MRI infarcts, deep white matter lesions (DWMLs), and periventricular hyperintensities were found in 26%, 43%, and 29% of the 178 participants, respectively. Subjects with DWMLs were significantly older and had a higher frequency of hypertension, higher systolic blood pressure, and more brain infarcts, but lower plasma concentrations of tryptophan. In the multivariate model, greater age and lower plasma tryptophan concentrations were independently associated with DWMLs. Tryptophan concentrations were inversely related to DWML grading, whereas hypertension and brain infarction were more common in subjects with higher extents of DWMLs. The present study suggests that greater age and lower plasma tryptophan concentrations were important in producing DWMLs in elderly subjects.
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PMID:Decreased plasma tryptophan associated with deep white matter lesions in elderly subjects. 988 64

The tryptophan-bounded WW domains ofNedd4 bind to the proline-tyrosine (PY) motifs contained in the C-terminal cytoplasmic region of the beta and gamma subunits of the rat amiloride-sensitive sodium channel (ENaC). In patients with Liddle's syndrome, the PY motif is mutated and the channel remains constitutively activated leading to sodium retention and hypertension. Although the function ofNedd4 is unknown, it contains a highly conserved ubiquitin protein ligase domain that may attach ubiquitin to ENaC, targeting it for degradation or it may modulate ENaC activity through another undetermined pathway. Xenopus laevis-derived cells, such as oocytes and the A6 kidney cell line, are important models currently used for the study of ENaC regulation. We describe the X. laevis homologue of Nedd4 (xNedd4). A partial clone, approximately 2.6 Kb, was isolated from an aldosterone-treated A6 cell cDNA library. Further 5' sequence, approximately 1.2 Kb, was obtained using a modified 5' rapid amplification of cDNA (RACE) protocol and cDNA from untreated A6 cells as the substrate. The identity and similarity of xNedd4 with human Nedd4 are approximately 63 and 71%, respectively. xNedd4 contains the C2, ubiquitin protein ligase, and 4 WW domains previously described for Nedd4 from other species.
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PMID:Molecular cloning of Nedd4 from Xenopus laevis. 1052 56

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

A missense mutation of the beta3-adrenergic receptor gene (ADRB3) resulting in a tryptophan/arginine exchange at position 64 (Trp64Arg polymorphism) has recently been associated with greater capacity to gain weight, a low resting metabolic rate, higher blood pressure, and an early onset of type 2 diabetes. These findings prompted us to examine the relationship between this mutation, blood pressure, and vascular complications in German patients with type 2 diabetes. White patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (n = 417) were enrolled in the study. The Trp64Arg polymorphism of the ADRB3 gene was detected by polymerase chain amplification and subsequent restriction digest with BstN I. Stepwise logistic regression analysis of the entire study population revealed a significant interaction between gender and genotype (P = .019). We therefore performed separate analyses for men and women. There was a significant relationship between hypertension and the ADRB3 Trp64Arg variant in men (P = .015), but not in women. Furthermore, blood pressure levels in male patients with the minor allele had higher blood pressure levels (P < .05), despite a significantly greater number of antihypertensive medications (P = .01). There was no association between ADRB3 genotype and vascular complications in these patients. In conclusion, our data are compatible with a contribution of this genetic variant of ADRB3 to hypertension in male patients with type 2 diabetes. Further studies will be needed to determine the role of this polymorphism as a predictor of hypertension or vascular complications in patients with type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:The Trp64Arg polymorphism of the beta3-adrenergic receptor gene is associated with hypertension in men with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1098 54

Clostridia are normally found in the healthy colon, where their numbers are kept in check by other bacteria. However, when they establish themselves in the ileum they become formidable foes. They produce medium-length fatty acids that increase water absorption, causing hypertension and drying up the feces, causing constipation.Furthermore, they can deconjugate bile (impaired fat absorption), metabolyze tryptophan (the most scarce of the essential amino acids), digest fiber (so that the more fiber the patient takes, the more the constipation is exacerbated), digest lecithin, produce carcinogenic metabolites and copious amounts of extremely foul smelling gas, etc. They can also prevent vitamin B12 absorption in the ileum, causing anemia. The synthetic sugar lactulose, which can only be digested by lactobacilli, can help displace the clostridia and resolve the constipation by causing the lactobacilli to produce short fatty acids that have the opposite effect to that of the medium fatty acids produced by clostridia and their accomplices: they cause water retention in the intestines.
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PMID:Clostridial constipation's broad pathology. 1133 61


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