Activation of type-1 dopamine receptors (DRD1) reduces renal sodium reabsorption. In a family-based random sample of 611 untreated whites (women, 45.0%; mean age, 38.6 years), we measured blood pressure (BP). We used the endogenous lithium clearance to assess fractional sodium excretion (FE Na) and proximal (RNa prox) and distal (RNa dist) tubular sodium reabsorption. We investigated multivariate-adjusted associations with the DRD1 promoter (A-48G, Q-94A, and C-800T) and GRK4 (Ala142Val). The frequent DRD1 haplotypes were AGC (48.2%), GGT (34.4%), and AAC (14.3%). While standardizing to mean sodium excretion (8.7 mmol/h) and adjusting for covariates and relatedness, RNa dist was lower in DRD1 -94GG homozygotes than -94A allele carriers (effect size, -0.94%; P=0.005) with opposite findings for FE Na (+0.084%; P=0.014). AGC carriers (-0.88%; P=0.012) and AAC carriers (+1.00%; P=0.004) had different RNa dist compared to corresponding noncarriers. Furthermore, FE Na was lower in AAC carriers than in noncarriers (- 0.082%; P=0.019). The family-based analyses identified a significant between-family component in the variance of the renal phenotypes associated with the DRD1 polymorphisms. Transmission of the DRD1 AGC haplotype was also associated with lower systolic (-3.54 mm Hg; P=0.016) and diastolic (-2.80 mm Hg; P=0.0064) BPs without significant between-family variance component. Plasma renin activity and urinary aldosterone excretion were not associated with DRD1 variation. The GRK4 Ala142Val polymorphism did not contribute to the phenotypes under study. In conclusion, renal sodium handling and BP were associated with genetic variation in the DRD1 promoter. The between-family variance component excluded population stratification for BP, but not for the renal phenotypes. © 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Staessen, J. A., Kuznetsova, T., Zhang, H., Maillard, M., Bochud, M., Hasenkamp, S., … Brand, E. (2008). Blood pressure and renal sodium handling in relation to genetic variation in the DRD1 promoter and GRK4. Hypertension, 51(6), 1643–1650. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.109611
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