Desegregation of the renin allele of the spontaneously hypertensive rat with an increase in blood pressure

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Abstract

The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) exhibits alterations in the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system which are similar to those that characterize patients with "nonmodulating" hypertension, a common and highly heritable form of essential hypertension. Accordingly, we determined whether the inheritance of a DNA restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) marking the renin gene of the SHR was associated with greater blood pressure than inheritance of a RFLP marking the renin gene of a normotensive control rat. In an F2 population derived from inbred SHR and inbred normotensive Lewis rats, we found the blood pressure in rats that inherited a single SHR renin allele to be significantly greater than that in rats that inherited only the Lewis renin allele. To the extent that the SHR provides a suitable model of "nonmodulating" hypertension, these findings raise the possibility that a structural alteration in the renin gene, or a closely linked gene, may be a pathogenetic determinant of increased blood pressure in one of the most common forms of essential hypertension in humans.

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Kurtz, T. W., Simonet, L., Kabra, P. M., Wolfe, S., Chan, L., & Hjelle, B. L. (1990). Desegregation of the renin allele of the spontaneously hypertensive rat with an increase in blood pressure. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 85(4), 1328–1332. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci114572

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