Background: Plasma adrenomedullin (ADM) concentrations increase in patients with hypertension, renal failure, heart failure, essential pulmonary hypertension, myocardial infarction, endotoxin shock, and many other conditions. The ADM receptor is a complex molecule that consists of calcitonin-receptor-like receptor (CRLR) and receptor activity-modifying protein 2 (RAMP2). Because CRLR determines the binding specificity of ADM, the CRLR gene is thought to be a susceptibility gene of hypertension. However, studies have not yet defined the relationship between the CRLR gene and hypertension. The aim of the present study was to investigate relationships between single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in the human CRLR gene and essential hypertension (EH) in a Japanese population.
Methods: We selected four SNP in the human CRLR gene (rs3771073, rs696574, rs698590, and rs1528233), and we performed a genetic association study in 209 EH patients and 216 age-matched normotensive (NT) individuals.
Results: There was no significant difference in overall distribution of genotypes or alleles of any of the SNP between the EH and NT groups. However, among women, the T allele of the SNP rs696574 (C --> T, in intron 6) was significantly more frequent in EH subjects than in NT subjects (P = .032).
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that rs696574 can be used as a genetic marker of EH in women.