Abstract

Even if the importance of angiotensinogen (AGT) gene has been known in gene targeting animals and humans genetic studies, its precise mechanism and the interaction among AGT gene variants, plasma AGT concentration and risk for hypertension remain uncertain. We examined whether AGT gene variants predispose to hypertension via an increase of plasma AGT concentration. Plasma AGT concentration was estimated from plasma angiotensin I which was cleaved by an excess amount of human renin and measured by RIA. Using 9 AGT gene variants which included new polymorphisms (G-152A and T+31C), we examined the association with hypertension and with plasma concentration by a case-control study. Haplotype analysis revealed that G-6A, T+31C and M235T polymorphisms were in absolute linkage disequilibrium and were associated with hypertension but not with plasma AGT level. On the other hand, -1074t;T235 haplotype was associated with an increase of AGT level but not with hypertension. In the haplotype analysis, only H3 haplotype frequency, which contained G-6, T+31 and M235 alleles, was significantly increased in normotensive subjects, suggesting that this haplotype is associated with a hypotensive effect. According to combined haplotype analysis of diallele and microsatellite markers, it remains a possibility that M235T, T+31C, G-6A, A-20C and G-1074T polymorphisms may play an important role in increased risk for essential hypertension. Our results suggest that the positive association between AGT polymorphism and hypertension is not simply explained by an increase of plasma AGT concentration.

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