A −6 G Variant of Angiotensinogen Gene and Aldosterone Levels in Hypertensives

Author:

Fardella Carlos1,Zamorano Pamela1,Mosso Lorena1,Gómez Luis1,Pinto Mauricio1,Soto Julia1,Oestreicher Eveline1,Cortés Paola1,Claverie Ximena1,Montero Joaquín1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Endocrinology, Internal Medicine, and the Associated Unit of Clinical Laboratories, Faculty of Medicine, Catholic University of Chile, Santiago.

Abstract

Abstract —Recently, a novel mutation in the promoter region of the angiotensinogen gene that involves the presence of an adenine instead of a guanine 6 bp upstream from the transcription initiation site (A −6 G) has been shown to induce an increase in gene transcription. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of the A −6 G mutation in essential hypertensive patients and to correlate it with aldosterone and renin activity levels. We studied 191 hypertensives. We measured levels of aldosterone (plasma and urinary) and plasma renin activity. We determined the variants A and G using a mutagenically separated polymerase chain reaction technique. In 191 hypertensives, the A variant was detected in 266 of 382 (69.6%) and the G variant in 116 of 382 alleles (30.4%). Plasma aldosterone was significantly higher in patients homozygous for AA than in those homozygous for GG (369±208 versus 246±142 pmol/L). Urinary aldosterone was significantly higher in homozygous AA than in AG or GG patients (62.4±39.4 versus 50.8±25.2 and 37.4±22.3 nmol/d, respectively). When the patients were grouped according to the presence or absence of the A allele, the aldosterone levels and the plasma aldosterone/plasma renin activity ratio were significantly higher in patients with the A allele. The presence of the A variant was associated with higher levels of aldosterone. These results suggest that the presence of the A variant could determine the appearance of arterial hypertension through higher transcription activity of the angiotensinogen gene and concomitant aldosterone production.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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