Abstract
Pregnancy-induced hypertension may be regarded as a manifestation of endothelial-cell dysfunction. The role of the eNOS gene in the development of a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension was evaluated by analysis of linkage among affected sisters and in multiplex families (n = 50). Markers from a 4-cM region encoding the eNOS gene showed distortion from the expected allele sharing among affected sisters (P = .001-.05), and the statistic obtained from the multilocus application of the affected-pedigree-member method also showed distortion (T([f(P)=sqrt(P)])= 3.53; P < .001). A LOD score of 3.36 was obtained for D7S505 when a best-fitting model derived from genetic epidemiological data was used, and LOD scores of 2.54-4.03 were obtained when various other genetic models were used. Estimates of recombination rate, rather than maximum LOD-score values, were affected by changes in the genetic parameters. The transmission-disequilibrium test, a model-free estimate of linkage, showed strongest association and linkage with a microsatellite within intron 13 of the eNOS gene (P = .005). These results support the localization of a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension- susceptibility locus in the region of chromosome 7q36 encoding the eNOS gene.
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CITATION STYLE
Arngrímsson, R., Hayward, C., Nadaud, S., Baldursdóttir, Á., Walker, J. J., Liston, W. A., … Soubrier, F. (1997). Evidence for a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension locus in the eNOS-gene region. American Journal of Human Genetics, 61(2), 354–362. https://doi.org/10.1086/514843
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