| Literature DB >> 25368024 |
Amanda E Garza1, Chevon M Rariy1, Bei Sun1, Jonathan Williams1, Jessica Lasky-Su2, Rene Baudrand1,3, Tham Yao1, Burhanuddin Moize1, Wan M Hafiz1, Jose R Romero1, Gail K Adler1, Claudio Ferri4, Paul N Hopkins5, Luminita H Pojoga1, Gordon H Williams1.
Abstract
Striatin is a novel protein that interacts with steroid receptors and modifies rapid, nongenomic activity in vitro. We tested the hypothesis that striatin would in turn affect mineralocorticoid receptor function and consequently sodium, water, and blood pressure homeostasis in an animal model. We evaluated salt sensitivity of blood pressure in novel striatin heterozygote knockout mice. Compared with wild type, striatin heterozygote exhibited a significant increase in blood pressure when sodium intake was increased from restricted (0.03%) to liberal (1.6%) sodium. Furthermore, renal expression of mineralocorticoid receptor and its genomic downstream targets serum/glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 1, and epithelial sodium channel was increased in striatin heterozygote versus wild-type mice on liberal sodium intake while the pAkt/Akt ratio, readout of mineralocorticoid receptor's rapid, nongenomic pathway, was reduced. To determine the potential clinical relevance of these findings, we tested the association between single nucleotide polymorphic variants of striatin gene and salt sensitivity of blood pressure in 366 white hypertensive subjects. HapMap-derived tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms identified an association of rs2540923 with salt sensitivity of blood pressure (odds ratio, 6.25; 95% confidence interval, 1.7-20; P=0.01). These data provide the first in vivo evidence in humans and rodents that associates striatin with markers of mineralocorticoid receptor activity. The data also support the hypothesis that the rapid, nongenomic mineralocorticoid receptor pathway (mediated via striatin) has a role in modulating the interaction between salt intake and blood pressure.Entities:
Keywords: blood pressure; polymorphism, single nucleotide; striatin protein, mouse
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25368024 PMCID: PMC4617687 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.04233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190