Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
New Genes
implicated in High Blood Pressure
Newswise — Researchers at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, along with an
international team of collaborators, have
identified common genetic changes associated
with blood pressure and hypertension.
The study, reporting online next week in
Nature Genetics, breaks new ground in
understanding blood pressure regulation and
may lead to advances in hypertension
therapy.
“Strikingly, none of the genes we identified
as having common variation are part of the
system we know about that regulates blood
pressure – the genes identified are not the
ones targeted by current prescription drugs
to control hypertension,” says Aravinda
Chakravarti, Ph.D., head of the Center for
Complex Disease Genomics in the McKusick-Nathans
Institute of Genetic Medicine at Hopkins.
“If we can increase the number of genes
implicated in blood pressure maintenance
from the current 12 to the expected 50 in
the next year, our understanding of the
biology will change completely.”
Consistently elevated blood pressure
increases the risk of stroke, heart attack
and kidney failure, among other conditions.
High blood pressure affects about 30 percent
or more of adults and causes millions of
deaths worldwide each year.
While the environment (diet, physical
activity, stress, etc.) affects blood
pressure, genetics also plays a substantial
role and, according to Chakravarti, may
increase some people’s risk of developing
high blood pressure under specific
environmental exposures; however, many genes
involved in blood pressure regulation remain
unknown.
To identify genes involved in blood pressure
maintenance and hypertension, the
researchers analyzed differences in the
genomes of nearly 30,000 people of European
descent whose average systolic blood
pressures ranged from 118 mm Hg to 143 mm Hg
and average diastolic blood pressures ranged
from 72 mm Hg to 83 mm Hg.
These individuals were part of a long-term
study of cardiovascular health and disease
supported by the National Institutes of
Health called ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in
Communities).
The researchers looked for genetic
differences that correlated with high blood
pressure and found 11 variations or changes
in DNA sequence that appear to regulate
blood pressure levels.
Changes in one gene, ATP2B1, were linked to
both blood pressure and hypertension. The
gene ATP2B1 makes a protein that pumps
calcium out of the cells that line the
interior of blood vessels.
Changes in SH2B3, a protein involved in the
immune response, were also linked to
increased blood pressure.
Researchers also identified changes in genes
involved in cell growth as well as genes
necessary for correct heart development.
Identifying genes in unexpected pathways
emphasizes the many levels of precise blood
pressure regulation, says Chakravarti.
According to Chakravarti, each of the
genetic differences found is common in the
population and causes only small changes in
blood pressure.
This study, he says, supports the idea that
changes in many genes contribute to high
blood pressure and hypertension.
Chakravarti believes the combination of
multiple changes in different genes may
increase blood pressure significantly
although the affect of each individual
change on blood pressure is small.
“Hypertension is difficult to study; it is a
trait, not a disease per se unless left
untreated, and many things contribute to
it,” says Chakravarti.
“These findings identify more pathways
important for blood pressure maintenance and
may lead to improvements in hypertension
therapy and the formation of early detection
systems.”
... ..
...
...