Literature DB >> 15882546

Common genetic mechanisms of blood pressure elevation in two independent rodent models of human essential hypertension.

Ryan S Friese1, Payam Mahboubi, Nitish R Mahapatra, Sushil K Mahata, Nicholas J Schork, Geert W Schmid-Schönbein, Daniel T O'Connor.   

Abstract

Genetic studies of essential hypertension, a complex, polygenic, and age-dependent disorder, have not been able to completely elucidate the genes responsible for development of the trait. We used a novel strategy to compare gene expression in the adrenal gland of two independent rodent models of human essential hypertension (the spontaneously hypertensive rat, SHR, and the blood pressure high mouse, BPH), with the goal of uncovering shared, common genetic mechanisms of hypertension across mammalian species that might, therefore, be pertinent to human hypertension. We deliberately studied young, 4- to 5-week-old, "prehypertensive" SHR and BPH that had not yet developed complete elevations in blood pressure (BP), so that we could minimize the impact of chronic, sustained BP elevation, age, and other confounding factors on gene expression, therefore increasing the likelihood that differential expression reflects relatively early pathogenic mechanisms in hypertension, rather than later responses to, or compensations for BP elevation. We compared transcript expression patterns of genes orthologous between the rat and the mouse, and presented candidate genes for hypertension that are differentially expressed in the same direction in SHR and BPH (ie, overexpressed in both SHR and BPH, or underexpressed in both SHR and BPH). Then we used a systems biology approach to analyze expression patterns in biochemical pathways and networks to isolate systems involved in hypertension pathology in both SHR and BPH. We found transcript pattern evidence for involvement of several systems in the pathology of hypertension in SHR and BPH: adrenal catecholamines and sympathetic function; steroid hormone synthesis, catabolism, and its contribution to enhanced glucocorticoid sensitivity in SHR; oxidative stress and its role as a common mechanism of vascular and end-organ injury; and intermediary metabolism with global but mechanistically different perturbations in SHR and BPH. Approximately 10% of the differentially expressed orthologous genes we studied shared a common direction of expression in the two hypertensive rodent strains, suggesting fundamental transcriptional mechanisms in common whereby mammals can elevate BP or respond to such elevation; even these shared orthologs spanned a diverse set of biological processes, reinforcing the multifactorial and complex nature of hypertension.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15882546     DOI: 10.1016/j.amjhyper.2004.11.037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hypertens        ISSN: 0895-7061            Impact factor:   2.689


  20 in total

1.  Gene-smoking interactions identify several novel blood pressure loci in the Framingham Heart Study.

Authors:  Yun J Sung; Lisa de Las Fuentes; Karen L Schwander; Jeannette Simino; Dabeeru C Rao
Journal:  Am J Hypertens       Date:  2014-09-03       Impact factor: 2.689

2.  Identification of novel loci affecting circulating chromogranins and related peptides.

Authors:  Beben Benyamin; Adam X Maihofer; Andrew J Schork; Bruce A Hamilton; Fangwen Rao; Geert W Schmid-Schönbein; Kuixing Zhang; Manjula Mahata; Mats Stridsberg; Nicholas J Schork; Nilima Biswas; Vivian Y Hook; Zhiyun Wei; Grant W Montgomery; Nicholas G Martin; Caroline M Nievergelt; John B Whitfield; Daniel T O'Connor
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2017-01-01       Impact factor: 6.150

3.  Molecular determinants of the adrenal gland functioning related to stress-sensitive hypertension in ISIAH rats.

Authors:  Larisa A Fedoseeva; Leonid O Klimov; Nikita I Ershov; Yury V Alexandrovich; Vadim M Efimov; Arcady L Markel; Olga E Redina
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2016-12-28       Impact factor: 3.969

4.  Systematic polymorphism discovery after genome-wide identification of potential susceptibility loci in a hereditary rodent model of human hypertension.

Authors:  Ryan S Friese; Geert W Schmid-Schönbein; Daniel T O'Connor
Journal:  Blood Press       Date:  2011-03-23       Impact factor: 2.835

5.  A common genetic variant in the 3'-UTR of vacuolar H+-ATPase ATP6V0A1 creates a micro-RNA motif to alter chromogranin A processing and hypertension risk.

Authors:  Zhiyun Wei; Nilima Biswas; Lei Wang; Maite Courel; Kuixing Zhang; Alex Soler-Jover; Laurent Taupenot; Daniel T O'Connor
Journal:  Circ Cardiovasc Genet       Date:  2011-05-09

6.  De novo expression of Kv6.3 contributes to changes in vascular smooth muscle cell excitability in a hypertensive mice strain.

Authors:  Alejandro Moreno-Domínguez; Pilar Cidad; Eduardo Miguel-Velado; José R López-López; M Teresa Pérez-García
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2008-12-15       Impact factor: 5.182

7.  Global metabolic consequences of the chromogranin A-null model of hypertension: transcriptomic detection, pathway identification, and experimental verification.

Authors:  Ryan S Friese; Jiaur R Gayen; Nitish R Mahapatra; Geert W Schmid-Schönbein; Daniel T O'Connor; Sushil K Mahata
Journal:  Physiol Genomics       Date:  2009-12-01       Impact factor: 3.107

8.  Chronic blockade of hindbrain glucocorticoid receptors reduces blood pressure responses to novel stress and attenuates adaptation to repeated stress.

Authors:  Andrea G Bechtold; Gina Patel; Guenther Hochhaus; Deborah A Scheuer
Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol       Date:  2009-03-11       Impact factor: 3.619

9.  High blood pressure associates with the remodelling of inward rectifier K+ channels in mice mesenteric vascular smooth muscle cells.

Authors:  Sendoa Tajada; Pilar Cidad; Alejandro Moreno-Domínguez; M Teresa Pérez-García; José R López-López
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2012-09-10       Impact factor: 5.182

Review 10.  Genetics of hypertension: from experimental animals to humans.

Authors:  Christian Delles; Martin W McBride; Delyth Graham; Sandosh Padmanabhan; Anna F Dominiczak
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2009-12-24
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