Uric acid, hominoid evolution, and the pathogenesis of salt-sensitivity

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Abstract

Humans have elevated serum uric acid as a result of a mutation in the urate oxidase (uricase) gene that occurred during the Miocene. We hypothesize that the mutation provided a survival advantage because of the ability of hyperuricemia to maintain blood pressure under low-salt dietary conditions, such as prevailed during that period. Mild hyperuricemia in rats acutely increases blood pressure by a renin-dependent mechanism that is most manifest under low-salt dietary conditions. Chronic hyperuricemia also causes salt sensitivity, in part by inducing preglomerular vascular disease. The vascular disease is mediated in part by uric acid-induced smooth muscle cell proliferation with activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and stimulation of cyclooxygenase-2 and platelet-derived growth factor. Although it provided a survival advantage to early hominoids, hyperuricemia may have a major role in the current cardiovascular disease epidemic.

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Watanabe, S., Kang, D. H., Feng, L., Nakagawa, T., Kanellis, J., Lan, H., … Johnson, R. J. (2002, September). Uric acid, hominoid evolution, and the pathogenesis of salt-sensitivity. Hypertension. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.HYP.0000028589.66335.AA

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