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1.
T Shinagawa  Y S Do  J Baxter  W A Hsueh 《Biochemistry》1992,31(10):2758-2764
Posttranslational processing of enzymatically inactive prorenin to an active form participates in the control of the activity of a key system involved in blood pressure regulation, growth, and other important functions. The issue is complicated because renin can be produced by a number of tissues throughout the body, in addition to the kidney, but the mechanism by which they process prorenin to renin is unknown and difficult to determine because of the small amounts of renin present. In the juxtaglomerular cell of the kidney, a 43 amino acid prosegment is cleaved from the amino terminus of prorenin to generate renin of molecular weight 44,000 [Do, Y. S., Shinagawa, T., Tam, H., Inagami, T., & Hsueh, W. A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1037-1043]. Using human uterine lining or a recombinant human prorenin system, we employed the same approach as that used in kidney, ammonium sulfate precipitation at pH 3.1 followed by pepstatin and H-77 affinity chromatography or gel filtration, to purify to homogeneity a 45,500-MW totally active renin. The specific activity of the active truncated prorenin was 850 Goldblatt units (GU)/mg of protein for chorion-decidua renin and 946 GU/mg of protein for recombinant renin, both similar to that reported for pure human renal renin. Both forms of renin cross-reacted with an antibody generated against 44,00-MW pure human renal renin and with an antibody generated against a peptide identical to the carboxy-terminal one-third of the prosegment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Prorenin, the inactive biosynthetic precursor of renin, is proteolytically cleaved in the renal juxtaglomerular cells to renin. The activity of renin is rate-limiting for generation of angiotensin II in the circulation. We identified a renal thiol protease which activates and accurately cleaves the 43-amino acid prosegment of human recombinant prorenin. In the current studies, 6.5 mg of this protease was purified from human renal cortex using a three-step procedure dependent upon Leu-Leu-arginyl affinity chromatography. This represented an overall 766-fold purification and resulted in three protein bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of molecular weights 30,000, 25,000, and 24,000. All three bands cross-reacted with an anti-human liver cathepsin B antibody upon immunoblot analysis; electrolution of each band and amino-terminal sequence analysis confirmed that the Mr 30,000 protein was mature cathepsin B and the Mr 25,000 and 24,000 bands were cathepsin B subunits. The pH optimum for the hydrolysis of pure human recombinant prorenin by pure renal cathepsin B was 6, and the Michaelis-Menten constant, Km, of the reaction was 1.4 x 10(-9) M. Immunostaining of human kidney using a sheep anti-human cathepsin B antibody demonstrated the presence of cathepsin B in the juxtaglomerular areas of the kidney, as well as in the renal proximal tubules. Electron microscopic immunohistochemistry using the same antibody demonstrated cathepsin B in dense secretory granules of the juxtaglomerular cells. Renin was also shown to be present in these granules. This study provides both biochemical and morphological evidence that renal cathepsin B is a human prorenin-processing enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
To examine the correlation of localization of prorenin, renin, and cathepsins B, H, and L, immunocytochemistry was applied to rat renal tissue, using a sequence-specific anti-body (anti-prorenin) that recognizes the COOH terminus of the rat renin prosegment. In serial semi-thin sections, immunodeposits for prorenin, renin, and cathepsins B, H, and L were localized in the same juxtaglomerular (JG) cells. Immunodeposits for renin were detected throughout the cytoplasm of the cells, whereas those for prorenin were detected in the perinuclear region. Immunoreactivity for cathepsin B was stronger than that for cathepsins H and L. By electron microscopy, prorenin was localized in small (immature) granules but not in large mature granules, whereas renin was localized mainly in mature granules. In serial thin sections, prorenin, renin, and cathepsin B were colocalized in the same immature granules containing heterogeneously dense material (intermediate granules). By double immunostaining, co-localization of renin with cathepsins B, H, or L was demonstrated in mature granules. The results suggest the possibility that processing of prorenin to renin occurs in immature granules of rat JG cells, and cathepsin B detected in JG cells may be a major candidate for the maturation of renin.  相似文献   

4.
Beta blockade with propranolol for 7 days in healthy normotensive dogs produced a sustained 20-25% drop in heart rate, but only a transient suppression of blood pressure. Plasma renin activity and prorenin were also suppressed transiently, suggesting that both are under beta-receptor regulation. Bilateral nephrectomy (2NX) was followed by rapid clearance of renin from the circulation, at a rate that was minimally influenced by beta blockade. In contrast, the plasma prorenin level rose markedly to a peak within an hour after surgery, leveled off during the next 24 hr, dropped almost toward the pre-2NX baseline by 48 hr, but proceeded to rise again between 48 and 120 hr. Propranolol administration before and during the 2NX period reduced the detectable prorenin, suggesting that its extrarenal source is under beta-adrenergic regulation. The rapid increment of prorenin after 2NX suggests that extrarenal prorenin may have constituted part of the total plasma prorenin before 2NX, and/or had developed sufficiently quickly afterwards to replace and exceed the disappearing renal prorenin. Any fresh increment beyond 48 hr could presumably have been only extrarenal. These observations suggest the existence of a rich beta-regulated extrarenal source of prorenin capable of rapidly supplying the plasma. However, no renin-angiotesin was apparently produced from this prorenin in the nephrectomized state, implying the lack of renal "convertase," without which the prorenin convertase mechanism as a whole was rendered ineffective. The source of the extrarenal prorenin and the identity of the renal convertase remain to be established.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Comparative immunocytochemical experiments with antisera directed against renin and three synthetical peptides (Pro 1, Pro 2 A and Pro 3) covering almost the entire span of human renin prosegment were performed on human kidney tissue. With anti-Pro 1, i.e. the antiserum which recognizes the NH2 terminus of human prorenin, no clear immunolabeling of juxtaglomerular epithelioid cell secretory granules could be obtained. It is therefore concluded that the corresponding portion of human prorenin may be cleaved off in the Golgi complex.After application of anti-Pro 3, the antiserum which recognizes the COOH terminus of the prosegment, only the juvenile secretory granules of epithelioid cells were consistently labeled, whereas, in contrast, some of the intermediate and most of the mature secretory granules were anti-Pro 3-negative. As the immunoreactivity of mature renin increased remarkably from protogranules to mature secretory granules, it is suggested that the cleavage of the COOH terminus of the prosegment, i.e. the activation of renin, takes place in juvenile and intermediate granules during condensation of the enzyme.The immunoreactivity of Pro 2A, corresponding to the middle portion of the prosegment, disappeared in a some-what earlier stage of granulopoiesis than that of Pro 3. It is therefore concluded that the corresponding segmental cleavage, the result of which is a truncated version of intact prorenin, occurs in the protogranules of epithelioid cells.The data presented are consistent with the assumption that the secretion of active renin takes place by the exocytosis of mature secretory granules, while the secretion of inactive renin, which is a truncated version of intact prorenin, is mediated by the exocytosis of juvenile and intermediate granules.These studies were supported by the German Research Foundation within the Forschergruppe Niere/Heidelberg  相似文献   

6.
Summary Immunogold techniques were used to investigate renin processing within granular juxtaglomerular cells following short-term (6 h and 1 day) and long-term (4 weeks) enalapril treatment in female BALB/c mice. In control animals, renin protein labelling was localized to all types of granules (proto-, polymorphous, intermediate and mature) and to transport vesicles, whilst prorenin labelling was found in all these sites except mature granules, confirming that active renin is localized to mature granules only. Following short-term enalapril treatment, the exocytosis of renin protein from mature granules was increased. Long-term enalapril treatment resulted in increased numbers of transport vesicles and all types of granules, consistent with increased synthesis and storage of renin. More large intermediate granules contained discrete regions labelled for prorenin. Renin protein was exocytosed from individual and multiple granules, whilst prorenin was exocytosed from protoand intermediate granules. It is concluded that under normal conditions prorenin is secreted constitutively by bulk flow from transport vesicles. On the other hand, active renin is secreted regulatively from mature granules. In conditions of intense stimulation (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition treatment), increased synthesis of prorenin leads to enhanced secretion of prorenin by both constitutive and regulative pathways. Under these conditions, the conversion of prorenin to active renin is increased, with increased secretion of active renin occurring in a regulative manner. Furthermore, the localization of prorenin to one discrete region of large intermediate granules leads us to conclude, that cleavage of the prosegment of renin occurs with the transition of intermediate to mature granules.  相似文献   

7.
Human renin plays an important role in blood pressure homeostasis and is secreted in a regulated manner from the juxtaglomerular apparatus of the kidney in response to various physiological stimuli. Many aspects of the regulated release of renin (including accurate processing of prorenin to renin, subcellular targeting of renin to dense secretory granules, and regulated release of active renin) can be reproduced in mouse pituitary AtT-20 cells transfected with a human preprorenin expression vector. Using protein engineering, we have attempted to define the roles of various structures in prorenin that affect its production and trafficking to dense core secretory granules, resulting in its activation and regulated secretion. Replacement of the native signal peptide of human preprorenin with that of a constitutively secreted protein (immunoglobulin M) had no apparent effect on either the constitutive secretion of prorenin or the regulated secretion of active renin in transfected AtT-20 cells. Removal of the pro segment resulted in a marked reduction in total renin secretion, but did not prevent renin from entering the regulated secretory pathway. Single or combined mutations in the two glycosylation sites of human renin did not prevent its regulated secretion; however, the complete elimination of glycosylation resulted in a significant increase in the ratio of renin/prorenin secreted by the transfected cells. Thus, these results suggest that 1) at least one of the sequences that target human renin to dense secretory granules lies within the protein moiety of active renin; 2) the presence of the pro segment is important for efficient prorenin and renin production; and 3) glycosylation can quantitatively affect the proportion of active renin secreted.  相似文献   

8.
Renin is formed by intracellular processing of prorenin and catalyzes the conversion of angiotensinogen to angiotensin I, the precursor to angiotensin II. Several tissues synthesize prorenin. However, in man, the kidney is the only known source of circulating renin, raising the possibility that the processing enzyme is unique to that tissue. We have transfected a gene that directs prorenin synthesis in pituitary AtT-20 cells, which are capable of processing other prohormones. The results demonstrate that transfected AtT-20 cells can secrete inactive prorenin, accurately process prorenin to active renin, and be stimulated to release active renin in response to a secretagogue. These data imply that cellular elements capable of directing the processing of prorenin to renin and its correct subcellular compartmentalization may be present in nonrenal cell types and that critical elements of the regulated release of renin that occur in the kidney can be reconstituted in cells in culture.  相似文献   

9.
Comparative immunocytochemical experiments with antisera directed against renin and three synthetical peptides (Pro 1, Pro 2A and Pro 3) covering almost the entire span of human renin prosegment were performed on human kidney tissue. With anti-Pro 1, i.e. the antiserum which recognizes the NH2 terminus of human prorenin, no clear immunolabeling of juxtaglomerular epithelioid cell secretory granules could be obtained. It is therefore concluded that the corresponding portion of human prorenin may be cleaved off in the Golgi complex. After application of anti-Pro 3, the antiserum which recognizes the COOH terminus of the prosegment, only the juvenile secretory granules of epithelioid cells were consistently labeled, whereas, in contrast, some of the intermediate and most of the mature secretory granules were anti-Pro 3-negative. As the immunoreactivity of mature renin increased remarkably from protogranules to mature secretory granules, it is suggested that the cleavage of the COOH terminus of the prosegment, i.e. the activation of renin, takes place in juvenile and intermediate granules during condensation of the enzyme. The immunoreactivity of Pro 2A, corresponding to the middle portion of the prosegment, disappeared in a somewhat earlier stage of granulopoiesis than that of Pro 3. It is therefore concluded that the corresponding segmental cleavage, the result of which is a truncated version of intact prorenin, occurs in the protogranules of epithelioid cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Summary The development and fate of the secretory granules in murine, rat and human juxtaglomerular epithelioid cells were examined using ultrastructural and immunocytochemical methods. The formation of mature renin granules occurs by fusion of rhomboid protogranules followed by coalescence of their paracrystalline contents, and by the fusion of roundish juvenile granules having an amorphous internum. Protogranules with paracrystalline contents are prominent in animals with stimulated renin synthesis, indicating an overcharge in processing and/or packaging of the secretory product, renin, under these conditions. Various similarities between lysosomes/multivesicular bodies (MVBs) and juvenile renin granules have been observed. With the exception of small MVBs, no renin-negative organelles that could be regarded as lysosomes were found in epithelioid cells of mice and rats. Therefore, we suggest that renin granules are modified lysosomes. Immunocytochemical findings indicate that juvenile secretory granules of epithelioid cells represent the converting and activating compartment for prorenin. Endocytosed foreign tracers such as HRP or cationized ferritin are preferentially internalized by juvenile renin granules, which hence appear to be outstanding by their fusogeneity. Consequently, juvenile granules are probably responsible for the secretion of prorenin, and mature granules for that of active renin.These studies were supported by the German Research Foundation within the Forschergruppe Niere/Heidelberg  相似文献   

11.
The biosynthesis and post-translational modifications, including proteolytic processing and core glycosylation, of the human renin precursor have been studied in vitro in a cell-free system. For this purpose, highly enriched renin mRNA was isolated from a renin-producing juxtaglomerular cell tumor and translated in rabbit reticulocyte lysate containing [35S]methionine in the presence or absence of dog pancreas microsomal membranes. Fluorographic analysis of the radioactive translation products, immunoprecipitated and then resolved on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, revealed that the primary translation product, preprorenin (Mr = 45,000), is initially processed to glycosylated prorenin (Mr = 47,000) during or shortly after its sequestration into the lumen of the microsomal membranes. The vectorial translocation across the membrane was confirmed by the observation that the proform was resistant to digestion with trypsin while preprorenin was sensitive. Radiosequencing and the use of prorenin-specific antibodies established the cleavage points of the pre- and profragment and showed that the in vitro precursor of human renin contains a 23-residue signal peptide and a 43-residue prosegment. The post-translational modification which, despite the removal of signal peptide, resulted in an increase in apparent Mr, reflects the glycosylation as examined using Xenopus oocytes microinjected with renin mRNA in the presence of tunicamycin, an inhibitor of protein glycosylation. Four anti-peptide antibodies which specifically recognize the NH2 terminus (Pro 1), two middle parts (Pro 2A and Pro 2B), and COOH terminus (Pro 3) of the prosegment, respectively, have been raised and used to characterize plasma prorenin. Renin precursors (pre- and prorenin) synthesized in vitro or in the kidney reacted with these antibodies (anti-Pro 1, anti-Pro 2A, anti-Pro 2B, and anti-Pro 3). However, quite unexpectedly, human plasma prorenin was recognized only by anti-Pro 3, indicating that plasma prorenin is a truncated version of intact prorenin, which lacks a large portion of the NH2 terminus of the prosegment and may represent an activation intermediate. This somewhat surprising result may lead to a better understanding of the exact roles and activation mechanisms of plasma prorenin existing in a relatively large amount.  相似文献   

12.
Apart from kidney, where renin synthesis takes place in all mammals, the submaxillary gland (SMG) of most mouse strains constitutes an important source of an isoenzyme, renin-2, that is highly homologous to renal renin, but unglycosylated [(1982) Nature 298, 90-92]. This unique phenotype is due to the presence of an extra copy of th renin gene. A puzzling observation is that (pro)renin-2 cannot be detected in the kidney of these animals, although both mRNAs accumulate at similar levels [(1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82, 6196-6200]. In order to investigate whether (pro)renin-2 expression is detectable in mouse heterologous cell lines we transfected the renin-2 cDNA into AtT20 (pituitary corticotrope) and BTG9A (hepatoma) cells. Stable clones expressing renin were obtained in both cases. BTG9A cells secreted only prorenin while AtT20 cells secreted prorenin and active renin. In addition, in AtT20 cells the secretion of active renin was stimulated by 8-Br cAMP. Our results show that unglycosylated (pro)renin-2 can be expressed and secreted in two murine cell lines. Moreover, it is correctly processed to active renin and secreted upon stimulation in AtT20 cells.  相似文献   

13.
The ultrastructural changes in the adrenal zona glomerulosa and renal juxtaglomerular apparatus have been examined during normal pregnancy in sheep. As pregnancy progressed, increasing numbers of cells in the adrenal zona glomerulosa displayed mitochondria with straight tubular "rod-like" structures replacing their normal lamelliform cristae; groups of cells showing these mitochondrial changes were predominantly located in the middle and superficial regions of the zona glomerulosa, but at all stages remained interspersed with cells with apparently normal mitochondria. In the same animals, the renal juxtaglomerular index was raised, reflecting an increase in renin storage, and juxtaglomerular myoepithelioid cells showed increased numbers of cytoplasmic granules, but no apparent increase in granular endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi profiles; there were no distinguishing morphological changes in juxtaglomerular peripolar cells. These findings provide morphologic evidence of stimulation of the adrenal zona glomerulosa in association with increased juxtaglomerular renin storage during pregnancy. The mitochondrial changes observed in an increasing proportion of cells in the zona glomerulosa closely resemble those seen in sodium-depleted animals, and may reflect the altered steroidogenic capacity of the adrenal gland in pregnant sheep. The finding of groups of cells displaying altered mitochondria lying next to cells with normal mitochondria suggests the presence of cells with different sensitivities to stimuli for aldosterone production or may indicate the presence of different cell types in the zona glomerulosa responding to different stimuli.  相似文献   

14.
The molecular biology of renin, prorenin, and the renin gene have been studied. A tissue-specific pattern of expression was found in rat and human tissues. In the human placenta, the transfected and endogenous renin promoters are active, and renin mRNA levels and transfected promoter activity are increased by a calcium ionophore plus cAMP. Cultured pituitary AtT-20 cells transfected with a preprorenin expression vector mimick renal renin release by converting prorenin to renin and releasing renin in response to 8Br-cAMP. Studies with mutant renin genes suggest that the body of renin directs renin to the regulated secretory pathway, and renin glycosylation affects its trafficking. Chinese hamster ovary cells were used to produce recombinant prorenin. Infused prorenin was not converted to renin in monkeys. Renin crystals were used to determine its three-dimensional structure. Renin resembles other aspartyl proteases in the active site and core, but it differs in other regions that probably explain renin's unique substrate specificity. Based on structural and mutational analysis, a model for human prorenin was built that suggests lysine -2 of the prosegment interacts with active site aspartate residues, and that the prosegment inactivation of renin is stabilized by binding of an amino terminal beta strand into a groove on renin.  相似文献   

15.
Despite suppression of the circulating renin-angiotensin system (RAS), high salt intake (HSI) aggravates kidney injury in chronic kidney disease. To elucidate the effect of HSI on intrarenal RAS, we investigated the levels of intrarenal prorenin, renin, (pro)renin receptor (PRR), receptor-mediated prorenin activation, and ANG II in chronic anti-thymocyte serum (ATS) nephritic rats on HSI. Kidney fibrosis grew more severe in the nephritic rats on HSI than normal salt intake. Despite suppression of plasma renin and ANG II, marked increases in tubular prorenin and renin proteins without concomitant rises in renin mRNA, non-proteolytically activated prorenin, and ANG II were noted in the nephritic rats on HSI. Redistribution of PRR from the cytoplasm to the apical membrane, along with elevated non-proteolytically activated prorenin and ANG II, was observed in the collecting ducts and connecting tubules in the nephritic rats on HSI. Olmesartan decreased cortical prorenin, non-proteolytically activated prorenin and ANG II, and apical membranous PRR in the collecting ducts and connecting tubules, and attenuated the renal lesions. Cell surface trafficking of PRR was enhanced by ANG II and was suppressed by olmesartan in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. These data suggest the involvement of the ANG II-dependent increase in apical membrane PRR in the augmentation of intrarenal binding of prorenin and renin, followed by nonproteolytic activation of prorenin, enhancement of renin catalytic activity, ANG II generation, and progression of kidney fibrosis in the nephritic rat kidneys on HSI. The origin of the increased tubular prorenin and renin remains to be clarified. Further studies measuring the urinary prorenin and renin are needed.  相似文献   

16.
Standard methods for determining prorenin-renin concentrations in plasma (PRC) and other tissues require the addition of exogenous renin substrate (angiotensinogen) to improve the kinetics of the renin reaction. We studied the effects of substrate prepared from normal human plasma fraction Cohn IV-4, or from nephrectomized (2NX) sheep plasma, on PRC of normal and 2NX human plasmas before and after prorenin activation by acid, cold, and trypsin, and compared the results with plasma renin activities (PRA, no added substrate). Plasmas from 2NX men exhibited negligible basal PRA, indicating that very little, if any, renin had been formed from the extrarenal prorenin they contained, and suggesting the lack of an endogenous prorenin activating mechanism, or "convertase," of probable renal origin. Prorenin was demonstrable by tryptic activation, more than by acid or cold, at up to about 30% of normal. Addition of Cohn IV-4 substrate to 2NX plasma unexpectedly produced (i) a basal PRC value higher than in normal plasma, (ii) total renin values after activation by acid, cold, and trypsin that were much closer to normal values than reflected by PRA methodology, without a commensurate increase (if anything a decrease) in prorenin as a percentage of total renin estimated by all activation methods, and (iii) substantial equalization of activation effects such that trypsin was no longer more effective than acid and cold (and this was also noted with normal plasma). The skewing effect of adding Cohn IV-4 substrate on the PRC of 2NX plasma was much greater than in normal plasma, even though 2NX plasma already had an above normal level of endogenous substrate and should have been influenced less. Enhancement of PRC was very pronounced even when Cohn IV-4 was added to make up only 9% of total (endogenous + exogenous) substrate in the incubation system, suggesting that it was not the added substrate but a renin-generating contaminant that inflated the PRC. Such inflation could be blocked by adding protease inhibitors, suggesting that the responsible protease(s) acted as a prorenin "convertase" that generated new renin from renal and (or) extrarenal prorenin contributed by the added substrate, as well as by the plasma being assayed. One component of convertase could be kallikrein, which was identified by chromogenic assay, the importance of which relative to total convertase activity is unknown.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
We examined by immunocytochemistry the localization of cathepsin B in endocrine cells of rat anterior pituitary lobe, using a monospecific antibody to cathepsin B. By light microscopy, granular immunodeposits for cathepsin B were detected in most endocrine cells of anterior pituitary lobe. Cells immunoreactive for luteinizing hormone (LH) were diffusely immunostained by anti-cathepsin B. By electron microscopy, immunogold particles for cathepsin B were localized in lysosomes of thyrotrophs, somatotrophs, and mammotrophs. In mammotrophs, immunogold particles for cathepsin B were also detected in crinophagic bodies. Double immunostaining co-localized immunogold particles for LH and cathepsin B in secretory granules of gonadotrophs. Immunocytochemistry was also applied to demonstrate localization of renin and prorenin in LH-producing gonadotrophs; immunogold particles for renin were co-localized with those for LH, cathepsin B, or prorenin in their secretory granules. Immunogold particles for prorenin were also co-localized with those for LH or cathepsin B in secretory granules, but prorenin-positive granules appeared less frequently than renin-positive granules. These results suggest that cathepsin B not only plays a role in the protein degradation in lysosomes of anterior pituitary endocrine cells but also participates in the activation of renin in gonadotrophs, as has been demonstrated in secretory granules of juxtaglomerular cells.  相似文献   

18.
To determine the role of the renal nerves on renin secretion and expression in the mature ovine fetus, we performed bilateral renal denervation on eight fetuses of time-dated pregnant ewes (126.8 +/- 0.6 days gestation) and compared renin in them to seven fetuses that underwent sham denervation (126.7 +/- 0.6 days gestation). Fetal arterial and venous catheters were implanted, and after 5-7 days of recovery isoproterenol was infused. Plasma active renin was lower in denervated animals than in intact animals under basal conditions and at each dose of isoproterenol. Plasma prorenin levels were lower in denervated fetuses but unaffected by isoproterenol. Denervation did not change renal renin, prorenin, or renin mRNA, but it did block isoproterenol-induced increases in renin mRNA in renocortical cells in vitro. We conclude that the renal nerves are required for renin secretory mechanisms and responsiveness of renin mRNA to beta-adrenergic stimulation but not for the expression of renin in the fetal kidney. We propose that one or more of the factors that maintain renin expression in the perinatal period may be absent or may be replaced by the renal nerves in the adult.  相似文献   

19.
Mannose-6-phosphate (man-6-P)/insulin-like growth factor-II (man-6-P/IgF-II) receptors are involved in the activation of recombinant human prorenin by cardiomyocytes. To investigate the kinetics of this process, the nature of activation, the existence of other prorenin receptors, and binding of native prorenin, neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were incubated with recombinant, renal, or amniotic fluid prorenin with or without man-6-P. Intact and activated prorenin were measured in cell lysates with prosegment- and renin-specific antibodies, respectively. The dissociation constant (K(d)) and maximum number of binding sites (B(max)) for prorenin binding to man-6-P/IGF-II receptors were 0.6 +/- 0.1 nM and 3,840 +/- 510 receptors/myocyte, respectively. The capacity for prorenin internalization was greater than 10 times B(max). Levels of internalized intact prorenin decreased rapidly (half-life = 5 +/- 3 min) indicating proteolytic prosegment removal. Prorenin subdivision into man-6-P-free and man-6-P-containing fractions revealed that only the latter was bound. Cells also bound and activated renal but not amniotic fluid prorenin. We concluded that cardiomyocytes display high-affinity binding of renal but not extrarenal prorenin exclusively via man-6-P/IGF-II receptors. Binding precedes internalization and proteolytic activation to renin thereby supporting the concept of cardiac angiotensin formation by renal prorenin.  相似文献   

20.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). (Pro)renin receptor (PRR) is activated in the kidney of CKD. The present study aimed to determine the role of indoxyl sulfate (IS), a uremic toxin, in PRR activation in rat aorta and human aortic smooth muscle cells (HASMCs). We examined the expression of PRR and renin/prorenin in rat aorta using immunohistochemistry. Both CKD rats and IS-administrated rats showed elevated expression of PRR and renin/prorenin in aorta compared with normal rats. IS upregulated the expression of PRR and prorenin in HASMCs. N-acetylcysteine, an antioxidant, and diphenyleneiodonium, an inhibitor of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase, suppressed IS-induced expression of PRR and prorenin in HASMCs. Knock down of organic anion transporter 3 (OAT3), aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and nuclear factor-κB p65 (NF-κB p65) with small interfering RNAs inhibited IS-induced expression of PRR and prorenin in HASMCs. Knock down of PRR inhibited cell proliferation and tissue factor expression induced by not only prorenin but also IS in HASMCs.

Conclusion

IS stimulates aortic expression of PRR and renin/prorenin through OAT3-mediated uptake, production of reactive oxygen species, and activation of AhR and NF-κB p65 in vascular smooth muscle cells. IS-induced activation of PRR promotes cell proliferation and tissue factor expression in vascular smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

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