|
[Rinsho Byori 50 : 497`501, 2002]
Implication of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in Association Study: Although multiple nuclear gene polymorphisms have been identified as potential
risk factors for hypertension, the linkage between extranuclear DNA variations
and hypertension has been uncertain. We investigated whether mitochondrial
DNA(mtDNA) polymorphisms are implicated in Japanese hypertension. We used
direct sequencing methods to search for single nucleotide polymorphisms(SNPs)
in a hypervariable segment of the mitochondrial control region in each
blood sample from 20 hypertensives and 20 normotensives. Then, we determined
the distribution of two SNPs, T16223C and C16362T, in 183 hypertensives
and 193 healthy subjects in the Aomori population in the northern area
of Honshu island of Japan. The relationship between the gene polymorphism
and hypertension was evaluated using chi-square test. Seventy SNPs were
found there and the number of SNPs in each individual was significantly
greater(p0.0111) in hypertensives than in normotensives. The C16223 genotype
was more frequent in hypertensives than in normotensives(p0.0018). There
was no significant difference in C16362T variant frequency between the
groups. From these results, we conclude that mtDNA SNPs were enriched in
Japanese hypertension and that the mtDNA C16223 genotype may be one of
the genetic susceptibility factors for hypertension. |