Striatin Gene Variants Are Associated With Salt Sensitivity of Blood Pressure by Mechanisms That Differ in Women and Men

Author:

Gholami Shadi K.1,Heydarpour Mahyar1ORCID,Williams Jonathan S.1ORCID,Pojoga Luminita H.1ORCID,Adler Gail K.1ORCID,Williams Gordon H.1ORCID,Romero Jose R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Hypertension, Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Salt sensitivity of blood pressure (SSBP) is a substantial risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Striatin (STRN) is critical for estrogen and aldosterone nongenomic signaling. However, the role of biological sex on the SSBP phenotype associated with STRN gene variants remains unexplored. METHOD: Data from 1306 subjects participating in the Hypertensive Pathotype (HyperPATH) Consortium were used to identify STRN gene single-nucleotide variants associated with SSBP. Haploblock analysis revealed a novel diplotype in the upstream regulatory region of STRN (rs888083 and rs6744560), with 31% of subjects being homozygous for the risk diplotype. RESULTS: Individuals homozygous for the risk diplotype had significantly greater SSBP than nonrisk diplotypes ( P <0.009). While a significant genotype/SSBP association was present in both sexes, their potential mechanisms differed. Women, but not men homozygous risk diplotypes, had significantly greater aldosterone levels than nonrisk diplotypes (5.8±0.4 versus 3.2±0.7 ng/dl; P =0.01; liberal Na + diet, adjusted). Men, but not women, homozygous risk diplotypes, had significantly reduced renal plasma flow response to Angiotensin II than nonrisk diplotypes (delta 95.2±5.2 versus 122.9±10.2 mL/min per 1.73 m 2 ; P =0.01; liberal Na + diet, adjusted). The single-nucleotide variants composing the risk diplotype were associated with lower STRN mRNA expression in human tissues (in silico). CONCLUSION: In women, the primary driver of SSBP is increased aldosterone, while in men, it is reduced renal plasma flow responses. Thus, despite a common hypertensive phenotype (SSBP) in both sexes, the specific treatment approaches might differ to increase therapeutic gain and mitigate adverse effects. These genetic- and sex-based observational results require confirmation in a prospective clinical study.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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