Essential hypertension has a heritability as high as 30 -50%, but its genetic cause(s) has not been determined despite intensive investigation. The renal dopaminergic system exerts a pivotal role in maintaining fluid and electrolyte balance and participates in the pathogenesis of genetic hypertension. In genetic hypertension, the ability of dopamine and D1-like agonists to increase urinary sodium excretion is impaired. A defective coupling between the D1 dopamine receptor and the G protein͞effector enzyme complex in the proximal tubule of the kidney is the cause of the impaired renal dopaminergic action in genetic rodent and human essential hypertension. We now report that, in human essential hypertension, single nucleotide polymorphisms of a G protein-coupled receptor kinase, GRK4␥, increase G protein-coupled receptor kinase (GRK) activity and cause the serine phosphorylation and uncoupling of the D1 receptor from its G protein͞effector enzyme complex in the renal proximal tubule and in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. Moreover, expressing GRK4␥A142V but not the wild-type gene in transgenic mice produces hypertension and impairs the diuretic and natriuretic but not the hypotensive effects of D1-like agonist stimulation. These findings provide a mechanism for the D1 receptor coupling defect in the kidney and may explain the inability of the kidney to properly excrete sodium in genetic hypertension.L ong-term regulation of blood pressure is vested in the organ responsible for the control of body fluid volume, the kidney (1, 2). Dopamine facilitates the antihypertensive function of the kidney because it is both vasodilatory and natriuretic (3). Dopamine (produced by renal proximal tubules) via D 1 -like receptors is responsible for over 50% of incremental sodium excretion when sodium intake is increased (3-6). The paracrine͞ autocrine dopaminergic regulation of sodium excretion is mediated by tubular but not by hemodynamic mechanisms (6). The ability of dopamine and D 1 -like agonists to decrease renal proximal tubular sodium reabsorption is impaired in genetic rodent hypertension and human essential hypertension (3,5,(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15). Indeed, the aberrant D 1 -like receptor function in the kidney precedes and cosegregates with high blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats. In addition, disruption of the D 1 receptor in mice produces hypertension (12, 13). The pivotal role of dopamine in the excretion of sodium after increased sodium intake has led to the hypothesis that an aberrant renal dopaminergic system is important in the pathogenesis of some forms of genetic hypertension (3,5,(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17). Several mechanisms potentially responsible for the failure of endogenous renal dopamine to engender a natriuretic effect in genetic hypertension have been investigated and ruled out, including decreased renal dopamine production and receptor expression, aberrant nephron segment distribution of dopamine receptors, defective effector enzymes (adenylyl cyclase or...
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