Angiotensinogen M235T variant and salt sensitivity in young normotensive caucasians

Abstract
A single-nucleotide variant of the angiotensinogen gene (AGT 235T) has been associated with essential hypertension and increased plasma levels of angiotensinogen. This variant may also serve as a genetic marker for the increased blood pressure response to dietary salt intake, but the relationship between AGT genotype and salt sensitivity has not been studied until now. We therefore examined the relationship between the AGT 235T genotype and the blood pressure response to short-term dietary salt restriction in young normotensive men. A total of 187 young normotensive men were characterized for family history of hypertension, salt sensitivity, plasma parameters of the renin angiotensin system under high- and low-salt diets, and the AGT 235T genotype. While the T allele was significantly associated with a positive family history of hypertension (X2 = 7.0; P P Our findings demonstrate that the AGT 235T allele is significantly associated with a positive family history of hypertension, but is not an important determinant of the blood pressure response to dietary salt intake in young normotensive subjects. It is therefore unlikely that the AGT 235T genotype can serve as an early genetic marker of salt sensitivity.