Human Tyrosine Hydroxylase Natural Allelic Variation: Influence on Autonomic Function and Hypertension |
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Authors: | Fangwen Rao Kuixing Zhang Lian Zhang Brinda K. Rana Jennifer Wessel Maple M. Fung Juan L. Rodriguez-Flores Laurent Taupenot Michael G. Ziegler Daniel T. O’Connor |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departments of Medicine, Pharmacology, and Psychiatry, University of California at San Diego, Skaggs (SSPPS) room 4256, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0838, USA;(2) VA San Diego Healthcare System, Skaggs (SSPPS) room 4256, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0838, USA |
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Abstract: | The catecholamine biosynthetic pathway consists of several enzymatic steps in series, beginning with the amino acids phenylalanine and tyrosine, and eventuating in the catecholamines norepinephrine (noradrenaline) and epinephrine (adrenaline). Since the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH; tyrosine 3-mono-oxygenase; EC 1.14.16.2; chromosome 11p15.5) is generally considered to be rate-limiting in this pathway, probed as to whether common genetic variation at the TH gene occurred, and whether such variants contributed to inter-individual alterations in autonomic function, either biochemical or physiological. We began with sequencing a tetranucleotide (TCAT) repeat in the first intron, and found that the two most common versions, (TCAT)6 and (TCAT)10i, predicted heritable autonomic traits in twin pairs. We then conducted systematic polymorphism discovery across the ~8 kbp locus, and discovered numerous variants, principally non-coding. The proximal promoter block contained four common variants, and its haplotypes and SNPs (especially C-824T, rs10770141) predicted catecholamine secretion, environmental stress-induced BP increments, and hypertension. Finally, we found that two of the common promoter variants, C-824T (rs10770141) and A-581G (rs10770140), were functional in that they differentially affected transcriptional activity of the isolated promoter, disrupted recognition motifs for specific transcription factor binding, altered the promoter responses to the co-transfected (exogenous) factors, and bound the endogenous factors in the chromatin fraction of the nucleus. We concluded that common variation in the proximal TH promoter is functional, giving rise to changes in autonomic function and consequently cardiovascular risk. |
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