Abstract

Fine-mapping of regions linked to the inheritance of hypertension is accomplished by genetic dissection of blood pressure quantitative trait loci (BP QTLs) in rats. The goal of the current study was to further fine-map two genomic regions on rat chromosome 1 with opposing blood pressure effects (BP QTL1b1 and BP QTL1b1a), the homologous region of which on human chromosome 15 harbors BP QTLs. Two new substrains were constructed and studied from the previously reported BP QTL1b1, one having significantly lower systolic BP by 17 mmHg than that of the salt-sensitive (S) rat (P = 0.007). The new limits of BP QTL1b1 were between 134.09 Mb and 135.40 Mb with a 43% improvement from the previous 2.31 Mb to the current 1.31 Mb interval containing 4 protein-coding genes (Rgma, Chd2, Fam174b, and St8sia2), 2 predicted miRNAs, and 4 lncRNAs. One new substrain was constructed and studied from the previously reported BPQTL1b1a having a significantly higher systolic BP by 22 mmHg (P = 0.006) than that of the S rat. The new limits of BPQTL1b1a were between 133.53 Mb and 134.52 Mb with a 32% improvement from the previous1.45 Mb to the current 990.21 Kb interval containing 1 protein-coding gene, Mctp2, and a lncRNA. The congenic segments of these two BP QTLs overlapped between 134.09 Mb and 134.52 Mb. No exonic variants were detected in any of the genes. These findings reiterate complexity of genetic regulation of BP within QTL regions, where elements beyond protein-coding sequences could be factors in controlling BP.

Highlights

  • Genetic analysis of quantitative traits in rat models has been shown to be a suitable approach to positional cloning of genetic determinants of polygenic traits [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • The previously reported congenic substrain S.LEW (Ch1x3x3x3Bx13) had a significant blood pressure (BP) lowering effect of -36 mmHg compared with the S rat and spanned the entire 2.31Mb QTL1b1 region from 134.09 to 136.40 Mb [16]

  • While genetic dissection of the human genome is difficult, substitution mapping in rats allows for further dissection of BP QTLs which can be comparatively mapped with human hypertension loci

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic analysis of quantitative traits in rat models has been shown to be a suitable approach to positional cloning of genetic determinants of polygenic traits [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Linkage of human hypertension to a large region on the q-terminus of human chromosome 15 has been detected by four independent studies [10,11,12,13]. This region in humans has been mapped to a location on rat chromosome 1 (RNO1) using homology mapping. BP quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in this region on RNO1 have been reported from previous linkage and substitution

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