Maternally Inherited Essential Hypertension Is Associated With the Novel 4263A&gt;G Mutation in the Mitochondrial tRNA <sup>Ile</sup> Gene in a Large Han Chinese Family

Shiwen Wang(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Ronghua Li(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Andrea Fettermann(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Zongbin Li(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yaping Qian(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yuqi Liu(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Xinjian Wang(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Anna C. Zhou(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Jun Qin Mo(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Li Yang(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Pingping Jiang(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Andreas Taschner(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Walter Rossmanith(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Min‐Xin Guan(Chinese PLA General Hospital)
Circulation Research
March 31, 2011
Cited by 125

Abstract

RATIONALE: Despite maternal transmission of hypertension in some pedigrees, pathophysiology of maternally inherited hypertension remains poorly understood. OBJECTIVE: To establish a causative link between mitochondrial dysfunction and essential hypertension. METHOD AND RESULTS: A total of 106 subjects from a large Chinese family underwent clinical, genetic, molecular, and biochemical evaluations. Fifteen of 24 adult matrilineal relatives exhibited a wide range of severity in essential hypertension, whereas none of the offspring of affected fathers had hypertension. The age at onset of hypertension in the maternal kindred varied from 20 years to 69 years, with an average of 44 years. Mutational analysis of their mitochondrial genomes identified a novel homoplasmic 4263A>G mutation located at the processing site for the tRNA(Ile) 5'-end precursor. An in vitro processing analysis showed that the 4263A>G mutation reduced the efficiency of the tRNA(Ile) precursor 5'-end cleavage catalyzed by RNase P. tRNA Northern analysis revealed that the 4263A>G mutation caused ≈46% reduction in the steady-state level of tRNA(Ile). An in vivo protein-labeling analysis showed ≈32% reduction in the rate of mitochondrial translation in cells carrying the 4263A>G mutation. Impaired mitochondrial translation is apparently a primary contributor to the reductions in the rate of overall respiratory capacity, malate/glutamate-promoted respiration, succinate/glycerol-3-phosphate-promoted respiration, or N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine/ascorbate-promoted respiration and the increasing level of reactive oxygen species in cells carrying the 4263A>G mutation. CONCLUSIONS: These data provide direct evidence that mitochondrial dysfunction caused by mitochondrial tRNA(Ile) 4263A>G mutation is involved in essential hypertension. Our findings may provide new insights into pathophysiology of maternally transmitted hypertension.


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