Hypertension, Vol 10, 122-126, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
GM Hare, P Ioannou, S Dubiski and DH Osmond
Nephrectomized rats have above-normal plasma prorenin levels, presumably of
extra-renal origin, but essentially no renin, suggesting a lack of
"convertase" for prorenin activation. Adrenalectomized rats have low plasma
prorenin levels accompanied by high renin activity, suggesting enhanced
prorenin activation by the action of a stimulated "convertase" mechanism.
Cross-circulation between adrenalectomized and nephrectomized rats for 15
or 30 minutes, dramatically lowered prorenin and raised renin levels in
both types of rats, suggesting extensive activation of prorenin to renin.
Similarly, in vitro mixing of these bloods (without cross-circulation)
raised renin activity over five times the expected calculated level, while
prorenin essentially disappeared. In both cases, prorenin from
nephrectomized rat plasma apparently was activated to renin by the enhanced
action of "convertase" in the adrenalectomized rat plasma. This newly
generated renin activity was, like normal plasma renin, almost completely
inhibited by a monoclonal antibody against hog renin and generated an
immunoreactive angiotensin I. In contrast, cross-circulation or in vitro
mixing of blood from normal control and nephrectomized rats produced little
detectable activation of prorenin and only modest increments of renin,
suggesting relative inactivity of the "convertase" mechanism in normal
plasma. Our data suggest that activation of plasma prorenin is a
significant regulated pathway for renin production, as it is greatly
stimulated after adrenalectomy and deficient after nephrectomy, thereby
implicating the kidney as an important contributor to the "convertase"
mechanism operating within the circulation.
ARTICLES
Regulated systemic activation of rat plasma prorenin
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