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Hypertension. 1996;27:67-71

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(Hypertension. 1996;27:67-71.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Polymorphism of the Glycogen Synthase Gene in Hypertensive and Normotensive Subjects

Camilla Schalin-Jäntti; Pirjo Nikula-Ijäs; Xudong Huang; Markku Lehto; Petteri Knudsen ; Mikko Syvänne; Mikko T. Lehtovirta; Tuula Tikkanen; Ilkka Tikkanen; Leif C. Groop

From the First (M.S.), Third (P.K.), and Fourth (C.S.-J., M.T.L., T.T., I.T.) Departments of Medicine and Department of Biochemistry (P.N.-I., X.H., M.L.), Helsinki (Finland) University, and Department of Endocrinology, Malmö General Hospital, University of Lund (L.C.G.), Malmö, Sweden.

Abstract Hypertension and non–insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) are characterized by a strong genetic component and impaired ability to store glucose as glycogen in skeletal muscle. Impaired insulin activation and altered genetic control of muscle glycogen synthase, the rate-limiting enzyme for glucose storage in skeletal muscle, could provide an explanation for this insulin resistance. We examined whether there is an association between the glycogen synthase gene (Xba I polymorphism) and hypertension in 304 nondiabetic subjects. We examined glucose tolerance with an oral glucose tolerance test and glucose storage in skeletal muscle with the euglycemic insulin clamp technique in combination with indirect calorimetry. The Xba I A2 allele of the glycogen synthase gene was enriched in subjects with hypertension and a family history of NIDDM (48%) compared with normotensive subjects without a family history of NIDDM (6%, P<.0001). The presence of the A2 versus the A1 allele was associated with decreased rates of insulin-stimulated glucose storage in hypertensive subjects (11.2±2.3 versus 16.9±2.6 µmol/kg lean body mass per minute, P=.029) but not in normotensive subjects (28.0±4.6 versus 29.6±3.7 µmol/kg lean body mass per minute). In conclusion, Xba I polymorphism of the glycogen synthase gene identifies a subgroup of hypertensive subjects with a family history of NIDDM. The data suggest that a locus in the glycogen synthase gene region on chromosome 19 may serve as a "thrifty gene," increasing susceptibility for insulin resistance when exposed to other environmental or genetic factors.


Key Words: glycogen synthase • polymorphism, genetics • insulin resistance • blood pressure • non–insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus




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J. St-Onge, D. R. Joanisse, and J.-A. Simoneau
The Stimulation-Induced Increase in Skeletal Muscle Glycogen Synthase Content Is Impaired in Carriers of the Glycogen Synthase XbaI Gene Polymorphism
Diabetes, January 1, 2001; 50(1): 195 - 198.
[Abstract] [Full Text]