Affiliation:
1. Berlin Institute of Health at Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Center of Functional Genomics, Germany.
Abstract
Primary aldosteronism is considered the commonest cause of secondary hypertension. In affected individuals, aldosterone is produced in an at least partially autonomous fashion in adrenal lesions (adenomas, [micro]nodules or diffuse hyperplasia). Over the past decade, next-generation sequencing studies have led to the insight that primary aldosteronism is largely a genetic disorder. Sporadic cases are due to somatic mutations, mostly in ion channels and pumps, and rare cases of familial hyperaldosteronism are caused by germline mutations in an overlapping set of genes. More than 90% of aldosterone-producing adenomas carry somatic mutations in K
+
channel Kir3.4 (
KCNJ5
), Ca
2+
channel Ca
V
1.3 (
CACNA1D
), alpha-1 subunit of the Na
+
/K
+
ATPase (
ATP1A1
), plasma membrane Ca
2+
transporting ATPase 3 (
ATP2B3
), Ca
2+
channel Ca
V
3.2 (
CACNA1H
), Cl
−
channel ClC-2 (
CLCN2
), β-catenin (
CTNNB1
), and/or G-protein subunits alpha q/11 (
GNAQ/11
). Mutations in some of these genes have also been identified in aldosterone-producing (micro)nodules, suggesting a disease continuum from a single cell, acquiring a somatic mutation, via a nodule to adenoma formation, and from a healthy state to subclinical to overt primary aldosteronism. Individual glands can have multiple such lesions, and they can occur on both glands in bilateral disease. Familial hyperaldosteronism, typically with early onset, is caused by germline mutations in steroid 11-beta hydroxylase/ aldosterone synthase (
CYP11B1/2
),
CLCN2
,
KCNJ5
,
CACNA1H
, and
CACNA1D
.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
44 articles.
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