6 research outputs found

    Genetic dissection of region around the Sa gene on rat chromosome 1: evidence for multiple loci affecting blood pressure.

    No full text
    A region with a major effect on blood pressure (BP) is located on rat chromosome 1 in the vicinity of the Sa gene, a candidate gene for BP regulation. Previously, we observed a single linkage peak for BP in this region in second filial generation rats derived from a cross of the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) with the Wistar-Kyoto rat (WKY), and we have reported the isolation of the region containing the BP effect in reciprocal congenic strains (WKY.SHR-Sa) and (SHR.WKY-Sa) derived from these animals. Here, we report the further genetic dissection of this region. Two congenic substrains each were derived from WKY.SHR-Sa (WISA1 and WISA2) and SHR.WKY-Sa (SISA1 and SISA2) by backcrossing to WKY and SHR, respectively. Although there was some overlap of the introgressed regions retained in the various substrains, the segments in WISA1 and SISA1 did not overlap. Furthermore, although the Sa allele in WISA1, WISA2, and SISA2 remained donor in origin, recombination in SISA1 reverted it back to the recipient (SHR) allele. Surprisingly, all 4 substrains demonstrated a highly significant BP difference compared with that of their respective parental strain, which was of a magnitude similar to those seen in the original congenic strains. The findings strongly indicate that there are at least 2 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) affecting BP in this region of rat chromosome 1. Furthermore, the BP effect seen in SISA1 indicates that at least a proportion of the BP effect of this region of rat chromosome 1 cannot be due to the Sa gene. SISA1 contains an introgressed segment of <3 cM, and this will facilitate the physical mapping of the BP QTL(s) located within it and the identification of the susceptibility-conferring genes. Our observations serve to illustrate the complexity of QTL dissection and the care needed to interpret findings from congenic studies

    Overweight, but not hypertension, is associated with SAH polymorphisms in Caucasians with essential hypertension.

    No full text
    The gene SAH (chromosome 16p12.3) is of interest in the etiology of human hypertension. In Caucasians a Pstl restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of SAH has been correlated with body weight in individuals with hypertension. To extend this finding we carried out a case-control study of several recently identified polymorphisms in SAH: 1) an insertion/deletion of TTTAA at nucleotide -1037 in the promoter; 2) an insertion/deletion of two Alu like sequences in intron 1; and 3) an A-->G variant in intron 12 located 7 bp upstream from exon 13. Subjects were 121 hypertensives with 2 hypertensive parents and 178 normotensives whose parents were both normotensive. All were Anglo-Celtic Caucasians and 51% of the hypertensives were overweight (body mass index (BMI)>25 kg/m(2)). The SAH promoter and intron 1 variants, but not the intron 12 or Pstl RFLP, were in linkage disequilibrium (LD) (D'=100%,
    corecore