Padmanabhan Sandosh, Joe Bina
Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom; and Center for Hypertension and Personalized Medicine; Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences, Toledo, Ohio.
Physiol Rev. 2017 Oct 1;97(4):1469-1528. doi: 10.1152/physrev.00035.2016.
Compelling evidence for the inherited nature of essential hypertension has led to extensive research in rats and humans. Rats have served as the primary model for research on the genetics of hypertension resulting in identification of genomic regions that are causally associated with hypertension. In more recent times, genome-wide studies in humans have also begun to improve our understanding of the inheritance of polygenic forms of hypertension. Based on the chronological progression of research into the genetics of hypertension as the "structural backbone," this review catalogs and discusses the rat and human genetic elements mapped and implicated in blood pressure regulation. Furthermore, the knowledge gained from these genetic studies that provide evidence to suggest that much of the genetic influence on hypertension residing within noncoding elements of our DNA and operating through pervasive epistasis or gene-gene interactions is highlighted. Lastly, perspectives on current thinking that the more complex "triad" of the genome, epigenome, and the microbiome operating to influence the inheritance of hypertension, is documented. Overall, the collective knowledge gained from rats and humans is disappointing in the sense that major hypertension-causing genes as targets for clinical management of essential hypertension may not be a clinical reality. On the other hand, the realization that the polygenic nature of hypertension prevents any single locus from being a relevant clinical target for all humans directs future studies on the genetics of hypertension towards an individualized genomic approach.
原发性高血压具有遗传本质这一令人信服的证据,促使人们对大鼠和人类展开了广泛研究。大鼠已成为高血压遗传学研究的主要模型,由此确定了与高血压有因果关联的基因组区域。近年来,人类全基因组研究也开始增进我们对多基因形式高血压遗传情况的理解。基于将高血压遗传学研究的时间进程作为“结构框架”,本综述梳理并讨论了已定位且与血压调节相关的大鼠和人类遗传因素。此外,还强调了从这些遗传研究中获得的知识,这些知识表明,对高血压的许多遗传影响存在于我们DNA的非编码元件中,并通过普遍的上位性或基因-基因相互作用发挥作用。最后,记录了当前关于基因组、表观基因组和微生物组这一更为复杂的“三联体”共同作用影响高血压遗传的观点。总体而言,从大鼠和人类研究中获得的总体知识令人失望,因为作为原发性高血压临床治疗靶点的主要致高血压基因可能并非临床现实。另一方面,认识到高血压的多基因性质使任何单个基因座都无法成为适用于所有人的相关临床靶点,这将未来高血压遗传学研究导向了个性化基因组方法。