Modularized Genes in an Adrenal Pathway Reveal a Novel Mechanism in Hypertension Pathogenesis
David W. Deng, Annie Ménard, Alan Y. Deng

TL;DR
A new pathway involving the CUE domain containing 1 protein (Cuedc1) has been identified as a key mechanism in hypertension pathogenesis.
Contribution
A novel in vivo pathway involving Cuedc1 is identified as a mechanism for hypertension and BP regulation.
Findings
Single QTLs in vivo affect blood pressure by 33.8 to 59.8%.
Combinations of QTLs have the same BP impact as a single QTL.
Cuedc1 is part of a pathway regulating BP, aldosterone, and organ functions.
Abstract
Human epidemiological studies have statistically localized a multitude of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for blood pressure (BP). However, their potential pathogenic mechanisms causing hypertension remain mysterious. To fill this void, we utilized congenic knock-in genetics to physiologically analyze the BP effects of individual and combinational QTLs. The effect magnitude from a single QTL in vivo ranged from 33.8 to 59.8%. ‘Double’ and multiple combinations of QTLs exhibited the same BP impact as a single QTL alone. Consequently, the products of these QTLs seemed to belong to the same pathway involved in physiological BP regulations. From this, we identified a novel pathway of hypertension pathogenesis in vivo controlled by the CUE domain containing 1 protein (Cuedc1). This pathway physiologically modulates blood pressure, aldosterone production, and renal and cardiac functions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic Associations and Epidemiology · Hormonal Regulation and Hypertension · Birth, Development, and Health
