The Y Chromosome Effect on Blood Pressure in Two European Populations

Author:

Charchar Fadi J.1,Tomaszewski Maciej1,Padmanabhan Sandosh1,Lacka Beata1,Upton Mark N.1,Inglis Gordon C.1,Anderson Niall H.1,McConnachie Alex1,Zukowska-Szczechowska Ewa1,Grzeszczak Wladyslaw1,Connell John M.C.1,Watt Graham C.M.1,Dominiczak Anna F.1

Affiliation:

1. From the British Heart Foundation Blood Pressure Group (F.J.C., M.T., S.P., M.N.U., G.C.I., N.H.A., A.M., J.M.C.C., G.C.M.W., A.F.D.), Department of Medicine and Therapeutics and Department of General Practice, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom; and Department of Internal Medicine, Diabetology and Nephrology (B.L., E.Z.-S., W.G.), Silesian School of Medicine, Zabrze, Poland.

Abstract

Higher blood pressure (BP) in males compared with females is well documented and is thought to be influenced in part by the Y chromosome. To examine whether there is an association between BP and a polymorphic Hin dIII biallelic marker in the nonrecombining region of the Y chromosome, we genotyped 155 males from a Polish study group and 762 males from a Scottish study group. We also tested for possible interaction between the Y chromosome and a mutation in the steroidogenic factor binding site of the aldosterone synthase gene by genotyping the same group from Scotland. There was no significant difference in age or body mass index between 2 Y chromosome genotypes in both study groups. Men with the Hin dIII(+) genotype had significantly higher systolic and diastolic pressures than those with the Hin dIII(−) genotype in both the Polish and Scottish studies. This difference between the genotypes was 5.27 mm Hg ( P =0.0014) and 3.14 mm Hg ( P =0.0005) for adjusted systolic BP and 2.6 mm Hg ( P =0.0045) and 1.44 mm Hg ( P =0.0084) for adjusted diastolic BP in the Polish and the Scottish studied, respectively. On binary logistic regression analysis, males with the Hin dIII(+)/TT SF1 genotype combination had an odds ratio for elevated BP of 3.92 (CI 1.21 to 12.68, P =0.023). Our results indicate that the Y chromosome harbors a locus or loci that contribute to BP variation in hypertensive and normotensive men. The polymorphism in the aldosterone synthase gene may interact with the Y chromosome to increase the odds of an individual’s developing higher BP.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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