genes, diets, & hypertension...role of dietary potassium in salt-sensitive hypertension dietary...

26
Chou-Long Huang, MD PhD Genes, Diets, & Hypertension

Upload: others

Post on 14-Sep-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Chou-Long Huang, MD PhD

Genes, Diets, & Hypertension

Page 2: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

% Hypertensives0 10 20 30 40

Ave

rage

Dai

ly N

aCl I

ntak

e (g

m) 30

20

10

Japanese(Northern Japan)

Japanese(Southern Japan)

Americans (Northern US)

Pacific IslandersAlaska Eskimos

Dahl, 1960

Relationship between salt intake and hypertension

Page 3: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Dietary sodium intake

BPSensitive

Resistant

Sensitivity to Salt-Induced Hypertension

Genetic &Environmental factors

Page 4: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Urine Blood

NaENaC

Epithelial Na Channel(ENaC) Na

NaBlood volume

AldosteroneMRSteroid Hormones:1. Sex hormones2. Mineralocorticoids3. Glucocorticoids

Mineralcorticoidreceptor (MR)

Cortisol CortisolCortisone11-βHSD2

11-βHydroxysteriod dehydrogenase

Page 5: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Defense Mechanisms Against Salt-Induced Hypertension

1. Aldosterone

Na intake Na reabsorption by kidney

Circulating volumeAldosterone

2. Pressure-Natriuresis

Na intake Na reabsorption by kidney

Circulating volumeBlood pressure

Page 6: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Dietary sodium intake

BPSensitive

Resistant

Sensitivity to Salt-Induced Hypertension

Genetic &Environmental factors

Page 7: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Urine Blood

NaENaC

AldosteroneMR

CortisolCortisone11-βHSD2

Cortisol

Liddle’sDisease

Genetic Factors (Diseases) That Increase Na Reabsorption

Page 8: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Liddle’s Disease

1. Autosomal-dominant disease featured by hypertension and hypokalemia (low blood potassium).

2. Occurs a result of gain-of-function mutations of ENaC, leading to increased number of ENaC channels at the cell surface

NaENaC

Normal

Blood

Na

Kidney

NaENaC

NaENaC

NaENaC

Liddle’s Disease

Hypertension

BloodKidney

Na

Na

Na

Page 9: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Patch-Clamp Recording of Ion Channels

Glass Pipette

NaCl

Cell with ENaC

NaCl

Suction NaCl

Na

Na

pico (10 ) Amp -12

Page 10: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Liddle’s Disease

NaENaC

Normal

Blood

Na

Kidney

NaENaC

NaENaC

NaENaC

Liddle’s Disease

Hypertension

BloodKidney

Na

Na

Na

Page 11: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Cell Membrane Proteins are Endocytosed and Degraded

Page 12: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium
Page 13: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Recognition of Proteins for Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis

1. Intracellular region contains specific amino acid sequence forrecognition by AP2 or clathrin

NPXY (asparagine-proline-any-tyrosine)

2. Tagging mechanism: Ubiquitin (Ub) is a 76 amino acid peptide that can be used to tagproteins destined for endocytosis

UbNedd4-2

Nedd4-2 is a ubiquitin ligase. Nedd4-2 attachs ubiquitin (Ub) molecules to membrane proteins.

Page 14: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Nedd4-2 binds to intracellular region of proteinsrich in amino acid proline (P) and tyrosine (Y)

Ubiquitination of membrane proteins leads to their endocytosis and degradation.

Ub

ENaC

Page 15: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Mutations of ENaC in Liddle’s Disease Prevent Ubiquitination

PY

Page 16: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Urine Blood

NaENaC

AldosteroneMR

CortisolCortisone11-βHSD2

Cortisol

Liddle’sDisease

Conn’sDisease

AME (Apparent Mineralcorticoid

Excess)

X

Licorice

Genetic Factors (Diseases) That Increase Na Reabsorption

Page 17: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Apparent Mineralcorticoid Excess (AME)

1. Autosomal-recessive disease

2. Occurs as result of loss-of-function mutations of 11-βHSD2

Liddle’sDisease

Autosomal-dominantGain-of-function mutation

NaENaC

AldosteroneMR

CortisolCortisone11-βHSD2

Cortisol

AME (Apparent Mineralcorticoid

Excess)

X

Page 18: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

In general, loss-of-function mutations are inherited as recessive

Exceptions:

1. Haplo-insufficiency (50% of protein function is insufficient)2. Second-hit phenomena (somatic mutation on top of inherited

recessive mutation3. Dominant-negative effect (mutant protein antagonizes

non-mutant protein function)

Page 19: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Dietary sodium intake

BPSensitive

Resistant

Sensitivity to Salt-Induced Hypertension

Genetic &Environmental factors

StressSmokeCocaine

Potassium deficiency

Page 20: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

BP

Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension

DietaryK Intake

Dietary sodium intake

Page 21: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Late paleolithic Current

Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150

Potassium (meq) ~320 ~50

Ratio 1:16 3:1

Dietary Sodium and Potassium Intake in Paleolithic vs Current Nutrition

Eaton and Konner, “Paleolithic Nutrition”, NEJM, 1985

Page 22: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Prevalence of Hypertension Inversely Related to Potassium Intake

Herbert Langford, in “Dietary potassium and hypertension: Epidemiologic data”. Annals. Int. Med, 1983. A low potassium intake can be considered an unindictedcoconspirator in hypertension.

Dietary potassium intake

Prev

alen

ce o

f HTN

(%)

Page 23: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Morris et a., Hypertension, 1999

High Dietary Potassium Intake Suppress Salt-Induced Hypertension

24 B, 14 W healthy normotensive subjects

15 meq 250 meqNa

K 30 meq 70 meq or 120 meq

Week 0 1 2 3 4 5 6

Page 24: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Genetic Diseases That Increase Na Reabsorption

NaENaC

AldosteroneMR

CortisolCortisone11-βHSD2

Cortisol

Liddle’s Disease:gain-of-function mutations of ENaC

AME: loss-of-function mutations of 11-βHSD2

X

Gordon’s syndrome: gain-of-function mutation of WNK1 kinase

WNK1

Page 25: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

K

Low potassium intake

K

High potassium intake

ENaC

WNK1

ENaC Na

WNK1

Blood pressure

NaNaNa

Blood pressure

Page 26: Genes, Diets, & Hypertension...Role of Dietary Potassium in Salt-Sensitive Hypertension Dietary K Intake Dietary sodium intake Late paleolithic Current Sodium (meq) ~20 ~150 Potassium

Dietary sodium intake

BPSensitive

Resistant

Mechanism of Salt-Induced Hypertension

Genetic &Environmental factors

StressSmokeCocaine

Potassium deficiency