A Genome-Wide Search For Susceptibility Loci to Human Essential Hypertension

Author:

Sharma Pankaj1,Fatibene Jennie1,Ferraro Franco1,Jia Haiyan1,Monteith Sue1,Brown Chrysothemis1,Clayton David1,O’Shaughnessy Kevin1,Brown Morris J.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Clinical Pharmacology Unit (P.S., J.F., F.F., H.J., S.M., C.B., K.O., M.J.B.), University of Cambridge, Addenbrooke’s Hospital; and MRC Biostatistics Unit (D.C.), Cambridge, UK.

Abstract

Abstract —We undertook a systematic search of the entire human genome with the affected sibling-pair model to identify major susceptibility loci to essential hypertension. Affected nuclear families (n=263) were recruited and divided according to definite or probable genetic contribution to hypertension depending on number of hypertensive siblings. The largest nuclear families were first screened with a set of microsatellite markers. Regions on the genome with P <0.05 were tested against the second set of smaller families. An exclusion map was generated to identify regions in which hypertension-causing genes are unlikely to reside. Sibling-pair linkage analysis identified a single locus on chromosome 11q ( P <0.004) in the first pass. A second pass with nuclear families that had only affected sibling pairs was, as expected, insufficient to support linkage to 11q. Multipoint exclusion-linkage analysis showed that 3 genetic loci are necessary to explain familial aggregation of essential hypertension. Our preliminary findings suggest that no single region within the human genome contains genes with a major contribution to essential hypertension. We show that the disease is indeed polygenic, with each gene providing a relatively small risk. Our exclusion map will help future investigators to concentrate on areas likely to contain these genes. The region on chromosome 11 is the first to point to a new candidate gene for hypertension that has arisen out of a genome search, but replication of these results at a higher significance is necessary before positional cloning can be justified.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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