In a previous study in 15 inbred mouse strains, we found highest and lowest systolic blood pressures in NZO/HILtJ mice (metabolic
syndrome) and C3H/HeJ mice (common lean strain), respectively. To identify the loci involved in hypertension in metabolic
syndrome, we performed quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis for blood pressure with direction of cross as a covariate in
segregating F
2 males derived from NZO/HILtJ and C3H/HeJ mice. We detected three suggestive main-effect QTLs affecting systolic and diastolic
blood pressures (SBP and DBP). We analyzed the first principle component (PC1) generated from SBP and DBP to investigate blood
pressure. In addition to all the suggestive QTLs (Chrs 1, 3, and 8) in SBP and DBP, one suggestive QTL on Chr 4 was found
in PC1 in the main scan. Simultaneous search identified two significant epistatic locus pairs (Chrs 1 and 4, Chrs 4 and 8)
for PC1. Multiple regression analysis revealed three blood pressure QTLs (
Bpq10, 100 cM on Chr 1;
Bpq11, 6 cM on Chr 4;
Bpq12, 29 cM on Chr 8) accounting for 29.4% of blood pressure variance. These were epistatic interaction QTLs constructing a small
network centered on Chr 4, suggesting the importance of genetic interaction for development of hypertension. The blood pressure
QTLs on Chrs 1, 4, and 8 were detected repeatedly in multiple studies using common inbred nonobese mouse strains, implying
substantial QTL independent of development of obesity and insulin resistance. These results enhance our understanding of complicated
genetic factors of hypertension in metabolic diseases.
Eri Nishihara, Shirng-Wern Tsaih, Chieko Tsukahara and Sarah Langley contributed equally to this work.