AI Article Synopsis

  • The European Project On Genes in Hypertension (EPOGH) studied how genetic variations in angiotensin receptors and other related genes relate to left ventricular mass (LVM) across three populations (Poland, Russia, Italy).
  • Researchers found no relationship between LVM and the AGTR1 A1166C polymorphism but observed that the AGTR2 G1675A's effect on LVM varied based on sodium excretion levels in men.
  • The results suggest that in men, the AGTR2 and ACE D/I genetic variations influence LVM independently, and this relationship is affected by salt intake.

Article Abstract

Background: In the European Project On Genes in Hypertension (EPOGH), we investigated in 3 populations to what extent left ventricular mass (LVM) was associated with genetic variation in the angiotensin II receptors type 1 (AGTR1 A1166C) and type 2 (AGTR2 G1675A) while accounting for possible gene-gene interactions with the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE D/I) and angiotensinogen (AGT -532C/T) polymorphisms.

Methods And Results: We randomly recruited 221 nuclear families (384 parents, 431 offspring) in Cracow (Poland), Novosibirsk (Russia), and Mirano (Italy). Echocardiographic LVM was indexed to body surface area, adjusted for covariates, and subjected to multivariate analyses using generalized estimating equations and quantitative transmission disequilibrium tests in a population-based and family-based approach, respectively. For AGTR1 and AGTR2, there was no heterogeneity in the phenotype-genotype relations across populations. LVM index was unrelated to the AGTR1 A1166C polymorphism. In men, in the population- and family-based analyses, the allelic effects of the AGTR2 polymorphism on LVM index differed (P=0.01) according to sodium excretion. In women, this gene-environment interaction did not reach statistical significance. In untreated men, LVM index (4.2 g/m2 per 100 mmol) and left ventricular internal diameter (0.73 mm/100 mmol) increased (P<0.02) with higher sodium excretion in the presence of the G allele with an opposite tendency in A allele carriers. The ACE D/I polymorphism, together with the ACE genotype-by-sodium interaction term, significantly and independently improved the models relating LVM index to the AGTR2 polymorphism and the AGTR2 genotype-by-sodium interaction.

Conclusions: The present findings support the hypothesis that in men the AGTR2 G1675A and the ACE D/I polymorphisms independently influence LVM and that salt intake modulates these genetic effects.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000145541.63406.BADOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

left ventricular
12
ventricular mass
8
genetic variation
8
variation angiotensin
8
angiotensin receptors
8
sodium excretion
8
agtr1 a1166c
8
lvm
5
mass relation
4
relation genetic
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!