A new mutation, R563Q, of the beta subunit of the epithelial sodium channel associated with low-renin, low-aldosterone hypertension.

Article Details

Citation

Rayner BL, Owen EP, King JA, Soule SG, Vreede H, Opie LH, Marais D, Davidson JS

A new mutation, R563Q, of the beta subunit of the epithelial sodium channel associated with low-renin, low-aldosterone hypertension.

J Hypertens. 2003 May;21(5):921-6.

PubMed ID
12714866 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the relationship between R563Q, a mutation of the renal epithelial sodium channel, and hypertension. METHODS: Hypertensive patients with low renin and aldosterone, hypokalemia or resistant hypertension were selected for DNA analysis. Genomic DNA encoding the C-terminal domain of the epithelial sodium channel beta subunit from hypertensives and controls was amplified by polymerase chain reaction and screened for the R563Q mutation by digestion with Sfc1 restriction enzyme, or sequenced. RESULTS: A previously undescribed mutation, R563Q, of the beta epithelial sodium channel was found in 10 of 139 black hypertensives, but was not present in any of 103 black normotensives, a significant (P = 0.0058) difference in frequency. The frequency of the mutation in the subgroup of black low-renin, low-aldosterone hypertensives (four of 14) was significantly (P = 0.0001) greater than in normotensives, and was also greater (P = 0.041) than in normal-high renin hypertensives, suggesting that R563Q is an activating mutation of the epithelial sodium channel. R563Q was also found in seven out of 250 mixed ancestry hypertensives, and was significantly (P = 0.017) associated with low-renin, low-aldosterone hypertension in this population group. The mutation was found in one of 100 mixed ancestry normotensives but not in any of 136 white hypertensives. Of the 18 R563Q patients, 11 had severe hypertension, leading to renal failure in two cases, while only two had hypokalaemia. CONCLUSIONS: R563Q, a new variant of the beta epithelial sodium channel, is associated with low-renin, low-aldosterone hypertension, in South African black and mixed-ancestry patients. Only a minority of individuals with the R563Q allelle fully express the Liddle's syndrome phenotype.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Amiloride-sensitive sodium channel subunit betaP51168Details