Three Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms of the Angiotensinogen Gene and Susceptibility to Hypertension: Single Locus Genotype Vs. Haplotype Analysis
Resource
PHYSIOLOGICAL GENOMICS v.17 n.2 pp.79-86
Journal
PHYSIOLOGICAL GENOMICS
Journal Volume
17
Journal Issue
2
Pages
79
Date Issued
2004-07
Date
2004
Author(s)
WU, SHYH-JONG
LIU, PI-HUA
HSU, KWAN-LIH
TSENG, CHUEN-DEN
TSENG, YUNG-ZU
Abstract
Although some single polymorphism analyses of the angiotensinogen (AGT) gene have been found to be associated with hypertension, the results are still inconsistent. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the association of the genotype and haplotype distributions of three single- nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (G-217A, A-6G, and M235T) in the AGT gene with hypertension. In a sample of 461 hypertensive and 327 normotensive patients in Taiwan, we found that -217AA and -6GG homozygotes conferred independently an increased risk to hypertension (P = 0.008 and P = 0.037, respectively), as illustrated by their significant associations with hypertension in both single SNP and pair-wise SNPs analyses. Meanwhile, a very weak linkage disequilibrium was found between the G -17A and the A-6G polymorphisms in terms of r(2) (< 0.05). On the basis of likelihood ratio test, only the set of haplotypes that constituted the A-6G and the M235T polymorphisms was associated with hypertension (χ(2) = 20.91, P = 0.0008) , which was mainly due to the increased frequency of the recombinant haplotypes (-6A &EQUIV; 235M and -6G &EQUIV; 235 T), and a pathophysiological role in the predisposition to hypertension was hence indicated. In functional assays, the promoter activities of the haplotypes -217A &EQUIV; -6A and- 217G &EQUIV; -6G were significantly higher than the most common haplotype -217G &EQUIV; -6A. These results highlight the necessity of a thorough analysis of all reported variants of a candidate gene in the elucidation of genetic susceptibility to a complex disease like hypertension, even when the variants are in the same haplotype block.
Subjects
renin-angiotensin system
genetic polymorphism
linkage disequilibrium
recombination
transcriptional activity