Cosegregation of the renin allele of the spontaneously hypertensive rat with an increase in blood pressure.

Theodore W. Kurtz(University of California, San Francisco), L Simonet(University of California, San Francisco), P M Kabra(University of California, San Francisco), Stacey Q Wolfe(University of California, San Francisco), Lieza M. Chan(University of California, San Francisco), Brian Hjelle(University of California, San Francisco)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
April 1, 1990
Cited by 154Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) exhibits alterations in the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system which are similar to those that characterize patients with "nonmodulating" hypertension, a common and highly heritable form of essential hypertension. Accordingly, we determined whether the inheritance of a DNA restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) marking the renin gene of the SHR was associated with greater blood pressure than inheritance of a RFLP marking the renin gene of a normotensive control rat. In an F2 population derived from inbred SHR and inbred normotensive Lewis rats, we found the blood pressure in rats that inherited a single SHR renin allele to be significantly greater than that in rats that inherited only the Lewis renin allele. To the extent that the SHR provides a suitable model of "nonmodulating" hypertension, these findings raise the possibility that a structural alteration in the renin gene, or a closely linked gene, may be a pathogenetic determinant of increased blood pressure in one of the most common forms of essential hypertension in humans.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis