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Published Online
on January 26, 2004

Hypertension. 2004
Published online before print January 26, 2004, doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000116224.51189.80
A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2004
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Submitted on November 5, 2003
Revised on December 8, 2003

A Functional Variant in the {alpha}2B Adrenoceptor Gene, a Positional Candidate on Chromosome 2, Associates With Hypertension

Fredrik von Wowern*; Kristina Bengtsson; Ulf Lindblad; Lennart Råstam; and Olle Melander

From the Departments of Endocrinology (F.v.W., K.B., O.M.) and Community Medicine (K.B., U.L., L.R.), Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fredrik.wowern{at}endo.mas.lu.se.

Abstract--In a genome-wide scan in Scandinavians, we found suggestive linkage between early-onset primary hypertension and a region on chromosome 2. The {alpha}2B-adrenoceptor gene, a candidate gene within this region, harbors a functional insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism of three glutamate residues. The aim of this study was to investigate if the DD genotype is associated with hypertension in Swedes. We performed an association study between the I/D polymorphism of the {alpha}2B-adrenoceptor and hypertension in the Skaraborg population. The material consists of all known patients with primary hypertension in Skara (n=772 nondiabetic subjects; n=171 normoalbuminuric type 2 diabetic subjects) and 817 population control subjects. We first compared genotype frequencies between patients with early-onset hypertension (aged 50 years or younger at onset) and subjects with normotension (blood pressure <120/80 mm Hg). Thereafter, the polymorphism was tested for association with hypertension at the population level. When comparing patients with early-onset hypertension and normotensive subjects, the DD versus II genotype was associated with early-onset hypertension when diabetic subjects were excluded from the analysis (OR=2.0; 95% CI=1.2 to 3.5) or when they were not excluded (OR=1.8; 95% CI=1.0 to 3.1). At the population level, the DD versus II genotype was weakly associated with nondiabetic hypertension (OR=1.4; 95% CI=1.0 to 1.8). Our data suggest that carriers of the DD versus II genotype of the {alpha}2B-adrenoceptor are at increased risk for hypertension. The genotypic effect is most evident when comparing groups corresponding to the upper and lower tails of the blood pressure distribution in the population; however, in nondiabetic hypertensive subjects it is weakly detectable even at the population level.


Key words: receptors • adrenergic • genetics • hypertension




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