JOURNAL ARTICLE

Decreased plasma levels of soluble receptor for advanced glycation end-products in patients with essential hypertension

Abstract

Advanced glycation end-products (AGE) may cause vascular stiffening by forming crosslinks through the collagen molecule or by interaction with their cellular transductional receptor (RAGE). A secreted isoform of RAGE, termed soluble RAGE (sRAGE), may contribute to the removal/detoxification of AGE by acting as a decoy. Here we studied the plasma sRAGE levels in hypertensive and normotensive human subjects. We also investigated the relationship between blood pressure parameters and plasma sRAGE concentrations.A cross-sectional case-control study.The outpatient clinic of a university teaching hospital. Participants were 147 never-treated patients with essential hypertension (87 men and 60 women, aged 50 +/- 10 years) and 177 normotensive controls (118 men and 59 women, aged 49 +/- 10 years).Plasma sRAGE levels determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure, pulse pressure (PP) and mean arterial pressure.The plasma concentration of sRAGE [median (interquartile range)] was 1206 (879-1658) pg/ml in hypertensive subjects and 1359 (999-2198) pg/ml in normotensive controls (P = 0.002). Simple correlation analysis revealed that log-transformed sRAGE levels were inversely correlated with SBP (r = -0.11; P < 0.001) and PP (r = -0.23; P < 0.001). Forward-selection multiple regression analysis revealed that log-transformed sRAGE levels were determined more strongly by PP (F = 3.127, P < 0.001).Plasma sRAGE levels are decreased in patients with essential hypertension and are inversely related to PP. Our results raise the possibility that sRAGE may play a role in arterial stiffening and its complications.

Keywords:
Medicine Glycation Blood pressure Internal medicine Rage (emotion) Interquartile range Endocrinology Receptor Essential hypertension Biology

Metrics

186
Cited By
9.34
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
30
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Glycation End Products research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Clinical Biochemistry
Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cardiovascular Health and Disease Prevention
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
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