Abstract

A genome-wide scan was performed to identify chromosomal regions related to age at diagnosis of hypertension and to early-onset hypertension in white and African American families from the Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network (HyperGEN). Age at diagnosis of hypertension was reported by participants at recruitment and standardized residuals adjusted for sex, study center, and body mass index were created. Participants were classified as having early-onset hypertension if their reported age at diagnosis was before 45 years in whites or before 35 years in African Americans. Variance component linkage analysis was performed for age at diagnosis and an affected sibpair linkage analysis was performed for early-onset hypertension, both implemented in GENEHUNTER. In whites, the heritability of diagnosis age was estimated to be 35% and the maximum LOD score was found on chromosome 1 at 123 cM (LOD = 1.48). The maximum LOD score for early-onset hypertension was located on chromosome 18 at 69 cM (LOD = 1.21). In African Americans, the heritability of age of diagnosis was estimated to be 42% and the maximum LOD scores were found on chromosome 4 at 120 cM (LOD = 2.44) and on chromosome 15 at 60 cM (LOD = 2.31). The maximum LOD for early-onset hypertension in African Americans was also on chromosome 4 at 153 cM (LOD = 2.05) and overlies the mineralocorticoid receptor. Although these results report modest LOD scores, several of these loci have been previously reported to be linked to hypertension and blood pressure, lending further support that genes related to the risk of hypertension may be at these loci.

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