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The Association of Estrogen Receptor-β Gene Variation With Salt-Sensitive Blood Pressure.

Authors :
Manosroi W
Tan JW
Rariy CM
Sun B
Goodarzi MO
Saxena AR
Williams JS
Pojoga LH
Lasky-Su J
Cui J
Guo X
Taylor KD
Chen YI
Xiang AH
Hsueh WA
Raffel LJ
Buchanan TA
Rotter JI
Williams GH
Seely EW
Source :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism [J Clin Endocrinol Metab] 2017 Nov 01; Vol. 102 (11), pp. 4124-4135.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Context: Hypertension in young women is uncommon compared with young men and older women. Estrogen appears to protect most women against hypertension, with incidence increasing after menopause. Because some premenopausal women develop hypertension, estrogen may play a different role in these women. Genetic variations in the estrogen receptor (ER) are associated with cardiovascular disease. ER-β, encoded by ESR2, is the ER predominantly expressed in vascular smooth muscle.<br />Objective: To determine an association of single nucleotide polymorphisms in ESR2 with salt sensitivity of blood pressure (SSBP) and estrogen status in women.<br />Methods: Candidate gene association study with ESR2 and SSBP conducted in normotensive and hypertensive women and men in two cohorts: International Hypertensive Pathotype (HyperPATH) (n = 584) (discovery) and Mexican American Hypertension-Insulin Resistance Study (n = 662) (validation). Single nucleotide polymorphisms in ESR1 (ER-α) were also analyzed. Analysis conducted in younger (<51 years, premenopausal, "estrogen-replete") and older women (≥51 years, postmenopausal, "estrogen-deplete"). Men were analyzed to control for aging.<br />Results: Multivariate analyses of HyperPATH data between variants of ESR2 and SSBP documented that ESR2 rs10144225 minor (risk) allele carriers had a significantly positive association with SSBP driven by estrogen-replete women (β = +4.4 mm Hg per risk allele, P = 0.004). Findings were confirmed in Hypertension Insulin-Resistance Study premenopausal women. HyperPATH cohort analyses revealed risk allele carriers vs noncarriers had increased aldosterone/renin ratios. No associations were detected with ESR1.<br />Conclusions: The variation at rs10144225 in ESR2 was associated with SSBP in premenopausal women (estrogen-replete) and not in men or postmenopausal women (estrogen-deplete). Inappropriate aldosterone levels on a liberal salt diet may mediate the SSBP.<br /> (Copyright © 2017 Endocrine Society)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1945-7197
Volume :
102
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28938457
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2017-00957