To dissect the genetic pathway of hypertension, we measured angiotensinogen in 685 members of 186 families recruited from a rural community in southwest Nigeria. Commingling and segregation analyses were carried out. A mixture of two and/or three distributions fits the data significantly better than a single distribution in commingling analysis, suggesting a major gene effect. Segregation analysis confirmed that a recessive major gene model for low values of angiotensinogen provides the best fit to the data and about 13% of the variance was due to the recessive gene segregation.