In familial hyperaldosteronism type I, hybrid gene-induced aldosterone production dominates that induced by wild-type genes


Autoria(s): Stowasser, M; Gartside, MG; Taylor, WL; Tunny, TJ; Gordon, RD
Data(s)

01/01/1997

Resumo

We compared the aldosterone-producing potency of the angiotensin II-sensitive wild-type aldosterone synthase genes and the ACTH-sensitive hybrid 11 beta-hydroxylase/aldosterone synthase gene by examining aldosterone, PRA, and cortisol day-curves (2-hourly levels over 24 h) in patients with familial hyperaldosteronism type I, before and during long-term (0.8-13.5 yr) glucocorticoid treatment. In 8 untreated patients, PRA levels were usually suppressed, and aldosterone correlated strongly with cortisol (r = 0.69-0.99). Fourteen studies were performed on 10 patients receiving glucocorticoid treatment that corrected hypertension, hypokalemia, and PRA suppression in all. ACTH was markedly and continuously suppressed in 6 studies, 3 of which demonstrated strong correlations between aldosterone and PRA (r = 0.77-0.92), ACTH was only partially suppressed in the remaining 8 studies; aldosterone correlated strongly: 1) with cortisol alone in 5 (r = 0.71-0.98); 2) with cortisol (r = 0.90) and PRA (r = 0.74) in one; 3) with PRA only in one (r = 0.80); and 4) with neither PRA nor cortisol in one. Unless ACTH is markedly and continuously suppressed, aldosterone is more responsive to ACTH than to renin/angiotensin II, despite the latter being unsuppressed. This is consistent with the hybrid gene being more powerfully expressed than the wild-type aldosterone synthase genes in familial hyperaldosteronism type I.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57984

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Endocrinology & Metabolism #Glucocorticoid-suppressible Hyperaldosteronism #Plasma-aldosterone #Remediable Aldosteronism #Hyper-aldosteronism #Dexamethasone #Hypertension #Cortisol #Renin #Angiotensin #Synthase
Tipo

Journal Article