Affiliation:
1. From the Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Texas HSC at Houston, Houston, TX.
Abstract
Background—
The recent development of a large panel of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) provides the opportunity to examine genetic relationships between distinct SHR lines that share hypertension but differ in their susceptibility to hypertensive end-organ disease.
Methods and Results—
We compared genotypes at nearly 10 000 SNPs obtained for the hypertension end-organ injury-susceptible spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR)-A3 (SHRSP, SHR-stroke prone) line and the injury-resistant SHR-B2 line. This revealed that that the 2 lines were genetically identical by descent (IBD) across 86.6% of the genome. Areas of the genome that were not IBD were distributed across 19 of the 20 autosomes and the X chromosome. A block structure of non-IBD comprising a total of 121 haplotype blocks was formed by clustering of SNPs inherited from different ancestors. To test the null hypothesis that distinct SHR lines share a common set of hypertension susceptibility alleles, we compared blood pressure in adult SHR animals from both lines and their F1 and F2 progeny using telemetry. In 16- to 18-week-old animals fed a normal diet, systolic blood pressure (SBP, mm Hg) in SHR-A3 was 205.7±3.86 (mean±SEM, n=26), whereas in similar SHR-B2 animals, SBP was 186.7±2.53 (n=20). In F1 and F2 animals, SBP was 188.2±4.23 (n=19) and 185.6±1.1 (n=211), respectively (
P
<10
−6
, ANOVA). To identify non-IBD haplotype blocks contributing to blood pressure differences between these SHR lines, we developed a high-throughput SNP genotyping system to genotype SNPs marking non-IBD blocks. We mapped a single non-IBD block on chromosome 17 extending over <10 Mb, at which SHR-A3 alleles significantly elevate blood pressure compared with SHR-B2.
Conclusions—
Thus hypertension in SHR-A3 and -B2 appears to arise from an overlapping set of susceptibility alleles, with SHR-A3 possessing an additional hypertension locus that contributes to further increase blood pressure.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Genetics(clinical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Genetics
Cited by
29 articles.
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