Hereditary Determinants of Human Hypertension

  • Shih P
  • O'Connor D
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Abstract

Essential hypertension is characterized by chronically elevated blood pressure with no specific underlying medical cause. Data on family history of affected individuals coupled with disease concordance rate in twins has established that both genetic and environmental factors determine susceptibility to hypertension. The heritability of hypertension is often cited in the range of ≈30% to 60%, with multiple contributory genes; additionally, ethnic and genetic heterogeneity participate in variable clinical presentation and drug response in hypertension, rendering genetic study of this disease a challenging task. Human population and animal studies have implicated several important etiologic pathways contributing to the clinical presentation of essential hypertension that enable functional candidate gene association studies, in addition to more comprehensive genome wide linkage or association studies. Recent results also suggest a complex genetic architecture for hypertension and its associated risk traits, including evidence for pleiotropy (one gene→multiple traits), epistasis (gene-by-gene interaction), and on occasion molecular heterosis (a more extreme phenotype for heterozygotes than either homozygote class). Here we highlight recent findings on the genetics of hypertension that may lead to new approaches for investigating the pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of the disease.

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Shih, P. B., & O’Connor, D. T. (2008). Hereditary Determinants of Human Hypertension. Hypertension, 51(6), 1456–1464. https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.107.090480

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