Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085580 (essential hypertension)
14,686 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (11 PHSD2) enzyme inactivates 11 betahydroxy steroids in sodium-transporting epithelia such as the kidney, thus protecting the non-selective mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) from occupation by cortisol in humans. Inhibition by xenobiotics such as liquorice or mutations in the HSD11 B2 gene, as occur in the rare monogenic hypertensive syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME), result in a compromised 11 betaHSD2 enzyme activity, which in turn leads to overstimulation of the MR by cortisol, sodium retention, hypokalaemia, low plasma renin and aldosterone concentrations, and hypertension. Whereas the first patients described with AME had a severe form of hypertension and metabolic derangements, with an increased urinary ratio of cortisol (THF+5alphaTHF) to cortisone (THE) metabolites, more subtle effects of mild 11 beta HSD2 deficiency on blood pressure have recently been observed. Hypertension with no other characteristic signs of AME was found in the heterozygous father of a child with AME, and we described a girl with a homozygous gene mutation resulting in only a slightly reduced 11 beta HSD2 activity causing 'essential' hypertension. Thus, depending on the degree of loss of enzyme activity, 11 beta HSD2 mutations can cause a spectrum of phenotypes ranging from severe, life-threatening hypertension in infancy to a milder form of the disease in adults. Patients with essential hypertension usually do not have overt signs of mineralocorticoid excess, but nevertheless show a positive correlation between blood pressure and serum sodium levels, or a negative correlation with potassium concentrations, suggesting a mineralocorticoid influence. Recent studies revealed a prolonged half-life of cortisol and an increased ratio of urinary cortisol to cortisone metabolites in some patients with essential hypertension. These abnormalities may be genetically determined. A genetic association of a HSD11 B2 flanking microsatellite and hypertension in black patients with end-stage renal disease has been reported. A recent analysis of a CA-repeat allele polymorphism in unselected patients with essential hypertension did not find a correlation between this marker and blood pressure. Since steroid hormones with mineralocorticoid action modulate renal sodium retention, one might hypothesize that genetic impairment of 11 beta HSD2 activity would be more prevalent in salt-sensitive as compared with salt-resistant subjects. Accordingly, we found a significant association between the polymorphic CA-microsatellite marker and salt-sensitivity. Moreover, the mean ratio of urinary cortisol to cortisone metabolites, as a measure for 11betaHSD2 activity, was markedly elevated in salt-sensitive subjects. These findings suggest that variants of the HSD11 B2 gene may contribute to the enhanced blood pressure response to salt in some humans.
...
PMID:The role of the 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 in human hypertension. 1093 Jan 96

The renal 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (11betaHSD2) enzyme inactivates 11-hydroxy steroids in the kidney, thus protecting the nonselective mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) from occupation by glucocorticoids. The gene is highly expressed in all sodium-transporting epithelia, but also in human placenta, pancreas, and thyroid. Mutations in the HSD11B2 gene cause a rare monogenic juvenile hypertensive syndrome called apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME). In AME, compromised 11betaHSD2 enzyme activity results in overstimulation of the MR by cortisol, causing sodium retention, hypokalemia, and salt-dependent hypertension. Recent evidence suggests a role of the 11betaHSD2 in essential hypertension. We found hypertension with no other characteristic signs of AME in the heterozygous father of a child with AME and in a girl with a homozygous gene mutation resulting in a mild deficiency of 11betaHSD2. Moreover, some studies in patients with essential hypertension showed a prolonged half-life of cortisol and an increased ratio of urinary cortisol to cortisone metabolites, suggesting a deficient 11betaHSD2 activity. These abnormalities may be genetically determined. A genetic association of a microsatellite flanking the HSD11B2 gene and hypertension in black patients with end-stage renal disease has been reported. We recently analyzed a CA-repeat allele polymorphism in unselected patients with essential hypertension, but did not find any correlation between this marker and blood pressure. However, we did find an association between this polymorphic CA microsatellite marker and salt sensitivity. Moreover, the activity of the 11betaHSD2, as shown by elevated mean ratios of urinary cortisol to cortisone metabolites, was decreased in salt-sensitive compared with salt-resistant subjects. These findings indicate that variants of the HSD11B2 gene contribute to the enhanced blood pressure response to salt in humans.
...
PMID:Role of the 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 in blood pressure regulation. 1076 70

Spironolactone, a competitive aldosterone receptor antagonist (ARA), has traditionally been the treatment of first choice in idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA) and for preoperative management of aldosterone producing adenoma (APA). Spironolactone is partially absorbed, is extensively metabolized mainly by the liver and its therapeutic properties are attributable to active metabolite canrenone. At therapeutic doses of 25 to 400 mg per day, spironolactone effectively controls blood pressure and hypokalemia in the majority of cases. Endocrine side effect are often associated and mainly consist of gynecomastia, decreased libido and impotence in man and menstrual irregularities in women. Canrenone and the K+ salt of canrenoate are also in clinical use: they avoid the formation of intermediate products with anti-androgenic and progestational actions, resulting in a decreased incidence of side effects. Furthermore, a relatively new selective ARA compound (eplerenone) with reduced affinity for androgen and progesterone receptors, is currently undergoing clinical trials. In essential hypertension aldosterone can contribute to hypertension and increases the incidence of myocardial hypertrophy and cardiovascular events. On the other hand, inhibition of Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System (RAAS) is associated with a decrease in blood pressure, with a regression of left ventricular hypertrophy and a reduction of target organ damage. Thus, ARA have been proposed as complementary treatment associated to ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor antagonists. Aldosterone is also known to play an important role in pathophysiolgy of congestive heart failure (CHF). In vitro and in vivo evidences suggest that aldosterone promotes myocardial fibrosis. This effect reflects direct, extra-epithelial actions of aldosterone via cardiac MR which are counteracted by ARAs in animal models. The RAAS is chronically activated in CHF. Non potassium-sparing diuretics further stimulate the RAAS and cause hypokalemia. Thus, use of ARAs in CHF was first proposed to correct potassium and magnesium depletion. At present ARAs are indicated in the management of primary hyperaldosteronism, in oedematous conditions in patients with CHF, in cirrhosis of the liver accompanied by oedema and ascites, in essential hypertension and in hypokalemic states. Its indication as adjunctive therapy of heart failure is currently under investigation. In fact, it is well known that even high doses of ACE inhibitors may not completely suppress the RAAS; aldosterone 'escape' may occur through non angiotensin II dependent mechanisms. Addition of spironolactone to an ACE inhibitor causes marked diuresis and symptomatic improvement. During the last few years, the RALES study (Randomized Aldactone Evaluation Study) was organized to explore the efficacy of combination therapy with spironolactone and ACE inhibitor in patients with CHF, class III or IV NYHA. The study was stopped 18 months early because the results were so statistically and clinically significant that it would be unethical to continue the trial. It is reported a 30 percent decrease in mortality and hospitalisation for cardiac causes in spironolactone-treated group vs placebo group.
...
PMID:Aldosterone antagonists in hypertension and heart failure. 1079 May 93

Endocrine pathology is a well-recognised and important cause of human hypertension. Recent research has highlighted the role of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-HSD) in the development of certain forms of hypertension. This enzyme, which exists as two genetically unique isoforms, 11 beta-HSD1 and 11 beta-HSD2, is responsible for the interconversion of biologically active cortisol with its inactive 11-oxo derivative, cortisone. Congenital deficiency of 11 beta-HDS2 results in inappropriate activation of the renal mineralocorticoid receptor by cortisol, leading to hypertension, hypokalaemia and metabolic alkalosis. Several authors have postulated a link between changes in 11 beta-HSD activity and the development of certain forms of essential hypertension. The existence of endogenous inhibitors of the enzyme provides compelling evidence in favour of this hypothesis, but few have been able to demonstrate a clear link between inhibition of 11 beta-HSD2 activity and hypertension by this mechanism. Similarly, several authors have suggested a relationship between reduced placental 11 beta-HSD2 activity, low birth weight with high placental weight, and the development of hypertension in adulthood. However, no clear evidence to suggest a direct correlation between birth weight, placental weight and 11 beta-HSD2 activity has been demonstrated. While the role of 11 beta-HSD in the development of hypertension remains controversial, an understanding of the interplay of this enzyme with both mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptors undoubtedly will yield data that will clarify this complex field.
...
PMID:11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase: a link between the dysregulation of cortisol metabolism and hypertension. 1082 33

The enzyme 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (11BHSD2) converts cortisol to cortisone in the kidney, thereby protecting the mineralocorticoid receptor from the mineralocorticoid actions of cortisol. The syndrome of Apparent Mineralocorticoid Excess (AME), a rare monogenic form of early onset hypertension with autosomal recessive inheritance, is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous loss of function mutations in the 11BHSD2 gene. Association has been reported between a microsatellite marker flanking the 11BHSD2 gene (D16S496) and primary hypertension. The aim of this study was to identify variants in the 11BHSD2 gene and to test if such variants or the D16S496 are associated with primary hypertension, in Swedes. To address this, the coding sequences of the 11BHSD2 gene was screened for mutations in 20 patients with primary hypertension with single strand conformation polymorphism and direct DNA sequencing techniques. A polymorphism was identified in exon 3; G534A (Glu178Glu). This polymorphism and the D16S496 microsatellite were tested for association with primary hypertension in a population consisting of 292 patients with primary hypertension and 263 normotensive control subjects. The frequency of G534G homozygotes was higher in patients with primary hypertension than in normotensive control subjects (92.8% vs 87.8%; P < 0.05). The allele frequencies of the D16S496 microsatellite did not differ between the two groups (chi(2) = 11.0, df = 10; P = 0.36). In conclusion, over-representation of individuals homozygous for the G534 allele in hypertensive patients compared with control subjects suggests that a mutation in linkage disequilibrium with the G534A polymorphism could increase susceptibility to primary hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension (2000) 14, 819-823
...
PMID:Association between a variant in the 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 gene and primary hypertension. 1111 99

Low-renin hypertension is common and usually implies increased retention of sodium (Na(+)). In every case of known etiology, there is a mineralocorticoid-induced increase in number of epithelial Na(+) channels (ENaCs) in the collecting duct of the kidney, leading to a state of "hyperENaCactivity." In primary aldosteronism, a result of either an adrenal adenoma or bilateral adrenal hyperplasia, aldosterone itself mediates the increase in ENaC function. A severe form of low-renin hypertension in which a molecular mutation in ENaC prevents removal of the channel from the cell surface, known as Liddle's syndrome, results in increased net ENaC activity but, in this case, independently of an increase in aldosterone. Glucocorticoid remedial aldosteronism, an autosomal dominant form of primary aldosteronism, results from a "new" or chimeric gene for aldosterone synthase. Adrenocorticotropic hormone stimulates its expression as well as secretion of aldosterone. Apparent mineralocorticoid excess results from a molecular mutation that allows cortisol to bind to the mineralocorticoid receptor. Both glucocorticoid remedial aldosteronism and apparent mineralocorticoid excess result in an increase in the number of ENaCs. The question remains whether low-renin essential hypertension is related to an increase in ENaC activity. Low-renin hypertension is most common in black patients, who tend to have lower levels of aldosterone as well as renin, which are features that resemble those found in Liddle's syndrome. Preliminary findings suggest that black patients with low-renin hypertension who are resistant to standard antihypertensive therapy respond favorably to the addition of spironolactone, a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist that reduces ENaC activity.
...
PMID:Low-renin hypertension: more common than we think? 1117 96

For the past decade, hypertension research has shifted strongly in the direction of molecular genetics. The success stories are the monogenic hypertensive syndromes. Classic linkage analyses have located the responsible genes for glucocorticoid-remediable aldosteronism, Liddle syndrome, and apparent mineralocorticoid excess. Furthermore, a recent gain-of-function mutation has recently been described in the gene for the mineralocorticoid receptor. These genes have been cloned and their functions elucidated. Other monogenic syndromes are currently being intensively studied. However, in the area of primary hypertension, the successes have relied on the candidate gene approach. Allelic variants in the genes for angiotensinogen, alpha-adducin, the beta2-adrenergic receptor, the G-protein beta3-subunit, and the T594M mutation in the beta-subunit of the epithelial sodium channel have been identified; however, the importance of these allelic variants to primary hypertension as a whole is not yet clear. Recently, an association approach was employed to implicate the mineralocorticoid receptor gene in salt-sensitivity. Linkage approaches have been attempted and the beta-subunit of the epithelial sodium channel has been linked to hypertension and to blood pressure as a quantitative trait locus. New approaches are necessary to elucidate salt-sensitive hypertension. The analysis of multiple genes simultaneously in terms of a metabolic control analysis may provide a more promising approach.
...
PMID:Molecular genetics of salt-sensitivity and hypertension. 1125 40

It remains to be defined whether molecular variants of the genes underlying Mendelian forms of hypertension play some etiological role in essential hypertension. To pursue this issue, we focused on the following three genes: the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2, and mineralocorticoid receptor genes. Five sequence variations of these genes, which were either previously reported to show significant association with hypertension or identified as "mild" molecular variants, were chosen for our study. Each variation was screened in 247 severe hypertensive patients with early onset (<45 years) and any detectable variations were subsequently characterized in 291 older normotensive subjects (>60 years) for the case-control comparison. We also investigated the significance of association between the tested variants and biochemical parameters reflecting sodium-water homeostasis, such as plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) and renin activity (PRA). Only the T663A variant (alpha-subunit of ENaC) turned out to be polymorphic in the Japanese population. In disagreement with positive associations previously reported in white and black subjects, we observed no significant association between T663A and hypertension, while allele frequencies of A663 were higher in Japanese (58-64%) compared with a reported prevalence of 29% in whites and 15% in blacks. T663A showed a borderline association (p=0.02) with the PAC/PRA ratio but not with PAC or PRA in the multivariate analysis. Our data did not support the association between Mendelian disease gene variants and essential hypertension in the Japanese. However, the present study did not definitively resolve this issue and further investigation is certainly warranted.
...
PMID:Evaluation of selected polymorphisms of the Mendelian hypertensive disease genes in the Japanese population. 1167 45

We analyzed the association between salt sensitivity in essential hypertension and 8 genetic polymorphisms in 6 genes of the renin-angiotensin aldosterone system. Seventy-one patients with essential hypertension were classified as salt sensitive or salt resistant by means of the 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (BP) change to high salt intake. The polymorphisms evaluated correspond to the following genes: ACE (I/D), angiotensinogen (M235T), angiotensin II type 1 receptor (A1166C), 11beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (11betaHSD2) (G534A), aldosterone synthase (C-344T and Intron 2 conversion), and the mineralocorticoid receptor (G3514C and A4582C); all were determined using standard polymerase chain reaction methods. Thirty-five patients (49%) were classified as salt sensitive. We analyzed the BP response to high salt intake among genotypes and found a significant association for ACE I/D and 11betaHSD2 G534A polymorphisms. Patients homozygous for the insertion allele of the ACE gene (II) had a significantly higher BP increase with high salt intake than did patients homozygous for the deletion allele (DD). Heterozygous patients (ID) exhibited an intermediate response. The prevalence of salt-sensitive hypertension was also significantly higher (P=0.003) in II (68%) and DI patients (59%) compared with DD hypertensives (19%). With respect to 11betaHSD2 G534A, patients with the GG genotype had a significantly higher systolic BP increase with high salt intake than did GA patients. In addition, plasma renin activity suppression in response to high salt was significantly greater in GA patients than in GG patients. The prevalence of salt-sensitive hypertension was 14.3% in GA patients and 50.8% in GG patients (P=0.067). In conclusion, the I allele of ACE I/D polymorphism is significantly associated to salt-sensitive hypertension. The BP response to high salt intake was different among genotypes of ACE I/D and 11betaHSD G534A, suggesting that these polymorphisms may be potentially useful genetic markers of salt sensitivity.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of salt sensitivity in human hypertension. Evaluation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system gene polymorphisms. 1171 24

For almost 40 years since its discovery in 1953, the mineralocorticoid hormone, aldosterone, was considered to affect blood volume, and thus blood pressure, by its action to retain sodium at epithelial tissues. Over the past decade, direct effects of aldosterone on the heart and blood vessels, and on the cerebral control of blood pressure, have been established in experimental animals. Simultaneously, the incidence of primary aldosteronism in essential hypertension is now acknowledged to be 10-20%, rather than <or= 1%, underscoring a previously unrecognized role for aldosterone in hypertension. The 30% improvement in mortality (and 35% in morbidity) seen in the RALES trial with the addition of low-dose spironolactone to best practice therapy in moderate to severe heart failure, similarly points to an unrecognized role for aldosterone in the pathophysiology of heart failure. Currently, both experimental and clinical studies are directed towards establishing the mechanisms involved in these pathophysiological effects of aldosterone in the cardiovascular system, and of the role of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists in offsetting or blocking such effects. A brief account of the current state of these mechanisms in at a cellular and tissue level forms the basis of this review.
...
PMID:Mineralocorticoid receptors and pathophysiological roles for aldosterone in the cardiovascular system. 1217 1


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>