K <sup>+</sup> Channel Mutations in Adrenal Aldosterone-Producing Adenomas and Hereditary Hypertension

Murim Choi(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Ute I. Scholl(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Peng Yue(New York Medical College), Peyman Björklund(Uppsala University), Bixiao Zhao(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Carol Nelson‐Williams(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Weizhen Ji(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yoonsang Cho(Yale University), Aniruddh P. Patel(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Clara J. Men(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Elias Lolis(Yale University), Max Wisgerhof(Henry Ford Hospital), David S. Geller(Veterans Health Administration), Shrikant Mane(Yale University), Per Hellman(Uppsala University), Gunnar Westin(Uppsala University), Göran Åkerström(Uppsala University), Wen‐Hui Wang(New York Medical College), Tobias Carling(Yale Cancer Center), Richard P. Lifton(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
February 10, 2011
Cited by 979

Abstract

Endocrine tumors such as aldosterone-producing adrenal adenomas (APAs), a cause of severe hypertension, feature constitutive hormone production and unrestrained cell proliferation; the mechanisms linking these events are unknown. We identify two recurrent somatic mutations in and near the selectivity filter of the potassium (K(+)) channel KCNJ5 that are present in 8 of 22 human APAs studied. Both produce increased sodium (Na(+)) conductance and cell depolarization, which in adrenal glomerulosa cells produces calcium (Ca(2+)) entry, the signal for aldosterone production and cell proliferation. Similarly, we identify an inherited KCNJ5 mutation that produces increased Na(+) conductance in a Mendelian form of severe aldosteronism and massive bilateral adrenal hyperplasia. These findings explain pathogenesis in a subset of patients with severe hypertension and implicate loss of K(+) channel selectivity in constitutive cell proliferation and hormone production.


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