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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although the role of renin in hypertension continues to be incompletely defined, recent progress in the chemistry of renin has been considerable. Extensive purifications of hog kidney renin and the renin-like mouse submaxillary gland enzyme have been achieved. Various inhibitory peptides based on tetradecapeptide renin substrate have been useful in renin kinetic studies and in renin affinity chromatography. Classification of renin as an acid protease results from its marked inhibition by pepstatin and from the discovery that free carboxyl at the active site is essential for activity in human and hog kidney and mouse submaxillary gland enzymes. The presence of pseudorenin in all tissues has limited the use of model peptides as renin substrates in plasma and crude tissue extracts, since the proteolytic properties of the two enzymes are nearly identical. The existence of renin in multiple, chromatographically separable forms has been known. More recently inactive forms have been found in plasma, amniotic fluid, and hog and rabbit kidneys. Prolonged storage or treatment with acid, trypsin, or pepsin causes activation; in some instances the conversion is from a higher than normal molecular weight. The implications of these findings with respect to the renin-angiotensin system need much further investigation.
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PMID:New developments in our knowledge of the chemistry of renin. 1 50

The phenomenon of plasma renin activattion by acid dialysis and preincubation with trypsin was studied in normal human plasma. Activation of plasma renin by exposure to pH 3.3 was shown to require at least one dialysis step and could be inhibited by the presence of Trasylol, indicating the involvement of a protease in acid activation. Amniotic fluid exposed to pH 1.5 to destroy renin and renin substrate was also found to contain an enzyme capable of activating plasma renin. The Michaelis-Menten constant Km and the molecular weight of activated "renin" were found to be similar to those of normal plasma renin. Inactive renins or renin-like enzymes were partially purified from plasma by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A, precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 and isoelectric focusing. Trypsin and acid exposure gave similar results with regard to the activation of this zymogen, suggesting that trypsin and acid dialysis may increase plasma renin activity by the same mechanism.
Hypertension
PMID:Studies on renin activation in normal human plasma. 9 12

1. A patient presented with mild hypertension, a raised plasma total renin concentration but a normal plasma angiotensin II concentration. The discrepancy was due to a high concentration of inactive renin in the plasma. 2. A renal carcinoma was detected and removed. The tumour contained a higher proportion of inactive renin than was found in uninvolved areas of the kidney. After unilateral nephrectomy, the plasma concentration of inactive renin fell to normal. 3. Six months later, plasma inactive renin concentration again increased and a metastasis was detected in a rib. Excision of the rib together with radiotherapy resulted in a fall in plasma inactive renin to normal. 4. The inactive renin in plasma and tumour extracts was activated to the same extent by acid treatment and by trypsin.
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PMID:A renal carcinoma secreting inactive renin. 28 45

Plasma and serum of healthy subjects apparently contain a precursor form of renin, or 'prorenin,' which can be activated by the ice-cold temperature at which samples are customarily handled for prolonged periods in laboratories and blood banks. The effect of such prior cryoactivation for 9 days at 4 degrees C is to increase subsequent plasma renin activity (PRA) at 37 degrees C by 108 +/- 16.3% (mean +/- SE) over the nonactivated control value (P less than 0.001). At a lower temperature (-4 degrees C), the cryoactivation effect is considerably greater than at 4 degrees C. Cryoactivation is not obliterated by the prefreezing of plasma, or reduced by inclusion of bacteriostats. Nor is it attributable to any detectable reduction in angiotensinase activity. In rats, cryoactivation at 4 degrees C is much lower than in humans, suggesting a marked species difference either in prorenin concentration or in the rapidity of its spontaneous conversion after blood collection. Trypsin at near optimal concentrations also consistently activates human plasma prorenin, whether at 4, 23, or 37 degrees C indicating that cold is not an essential concomitant of tryptic activation. In excess, the magnitude of which varies among individuals, trypsin at first produces activation and later a decline in PRA, probably due to degradation of the reactants (prorenin, renin, angiotensinogen) and of the initial product (angiotensin I). The identity of angiotensin I in activated and control plasmas can be established by specific radioimmunoassay, and bioassay. Our data indicate that tryptic activation involves little direct production of angiotensin I but rather converts prorenin, thereby enhancing the angiotensin generating capacity of the plasma renin system itself. Tryptic activation in plasma of anaesthetized dogs is lower than in humans, but higher than in conscious or anaesthetized rabbits in whom the effect appears to be slight. In anaesthetized rats there is virtually no tryptic activation, which is in line with the results by cryoactivation. Since the renin--angiotensin systems of dogs, rabbits, and rats have been extensively studied in experimental models of human hypertension, these observed departures from human levels of cryoactivation and tryptic activation of prorenin deserve further investigation.
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PMID:Cryoactivation and tryptic activation of blood 'prorenin' in normal man and animals. 70 20

Recently, a parathyroid hypertensive factor was postulated to play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension in genetically hypertensive rats. Therefore it was examined, whether in human parathyroid glands a vasopressor substance can be detected. For this purpose, homogenates of hyperplastic parathyroid glands from 20 patients with tertiary hyperparathyroidism were deproteinized and fractionated by gel chromatography. The fractions obtained were tested for vasopressor activity in isolated perfused rat kidneys. A vasopressor fraction containing substances of 0.6-2.5 kDa was identified in the parathyroid glands. The responsible product was heat sensitive, peptidase-, trypsin- and carboxypeptidase y- sensitive and hydrophilic, as it did not bind to hydrophobic reversed-phase gel. These results suggest that parathyroid glands contain a hydrophilic peptide-like vasopressor substance different from the parathyroid hormone.
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PMID:A vasopressor factor partially purified from human parathyroid glands. 141 52

In humans, active renin is generated by the removal of a 43-amino acid prosegment from the zymogen prorenin. This cleavage event is highly specific, occurring at only one of the seven pairs of basic amino acids in the body of preprorenin. This cleavage site selectivity is also displayed by a number of other proteases in vitro and in mouse pituitary AtT-20 cells transfected with a human preprorenin expression vector, suggesting that specificity of cleavage is directed in part by the primary sequence, the higher order structure, or both of prorenin itself. To test this hypothesis, single amino acid mutations were introduced in the region of human preprorenin surrounding the natural cleavage site, and the resultant recombinant proteins were expressed in cultured Chinese hamster ovary and AtT-20 cells. The results suggest that amino acids in addition to the pair of basic amino acids surrounding the cleavage site affect the ability of both trypsin and the endogenous AtT-20 processing enzyme to cleave prorenin. Notably, although a proline at position -4 is essential for processing of prorenin in AtT-20 cells and is correlated with predicted formation of a beta-turn at this position, site-directed mutations suggest that this structural feature in addition to a pair of basic amino acids is not sufficient to lead to proteolytic activation of prorenin. Displacement of sequences surrounding the cleavage site to a position 10 amino acids toward the amino terminus led to partial processing of a mutated prorenin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hypertension 1992 Dec
PMID:Molecular determinants of human prorenin processing. 145 93

We have identified and characterized an anti-human renin monoclonal antibody R1-20-5 that is selective for human active renin. R1-20-5 binds active renin with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 2.5 x 10(-7) M/l and inhibits renin enzymatic activity with an inhibitory constant (IC50) of 1.4 x 10(-8) M/l. R1-20-5 competes with a synthetic renin inhibitor for binding with renin, demonstrating further that it is binding to or close to the active site. This antibody does not bind prorenin in human plasma or recombinant prorenin expressed by L-929 fibroblasts transfected with human renin gene. Furthermore, trypsin activation of prorenin resulted in immunoreactivity of the activated prorenin toward the antibody. In addition, an immunoaffinity column of R1-20-5 coupled to Sepharose retained active renin but had a low affinity for prorenin. A sensitive and rapid solid phase radioimmunoassay for active renin was developed using a "sandwich" technique employing R1-20-5 and a second non-active site-directed monoclonal antibody to human renin. Renin levels in human plasma samples were determined by the standard enzymatic assay, and by the direct radioimmunoassay for active renin, before and after trypsin activation. Trypsin treatment of plasma resulted in parallel increases in both the plasma renin enzymatic activity and in the plasma active renin concentration as measured by the direct radioimmunoassay. Overall, plasma immunoreactive active renin concentration correlated significantly with plasma renin enzymatic activity (r = 0.96, p less than 0.001). In summary, the monoclonal antibody R1-20-5 is selective for human active renin and should be a very useful tool for studies of the active enzyme in humans.
Hypertension 1992 Mar
PMID:Characterization of a monoclonal antibody specific for human active renin. 154 51

Prorenin determination in rat plasma has been problematic from the outset. Consequently, its existence is questioned by some and its quantity by others, making it difficult for knowledge to advance as to its function relative to the renin system. The present study examines major variables in the determination of rat plasma prorenin and renin, notably different prorenin activation protocols involving blood samples obtained under various conditions from animals under different anesthetics. We found that a trypsin activation step with 5 mg/mL plasma, 60 min at 23 degrees C, followed by a PRA step of 10 min at 37 degrees C, resulted in the highest prorenin estimates, up to approximately 400 ng.mL-1.h-1 in terms of angiotensin I, as compared with published values of 0-190, based on other protocols. These estimates were obtained despite considerable destruction of angiotensinogen (renin substrate) by trypsin. Cryoactivation of prorenin was much less effective than in human plasma but, when followed by trypsin, it facilitated greater activation than with trypsin alone. Comparable fresh and fresh-frozen plasmas had similar prorenin-renin values, but lower values were observed in plasmas that had been repeatedly frozen and thawed. Conscious rats and those anesthetized with Inactin or ether had higher renins and prorenins than those anesthetized with methoxyflurane or halothane. Rats with kidneys in place during blood collection had higher renins (but not prorenins) than those whose kidneys were clamped off, suggesting that last-minute renin release during blood collection had occurred. We conclude that (i) trypsin generates increased renin, or renin-like, activity in plasma, suggesting activation of a precursor; (ii) on this basis, high prorenin levels exist in normal rat plasma; (iii) renin and prorenin levels are variously influenced by different anesthetics and blood handling procedures; (iv) variation in prorenin levels suggests that it is a dynamic (functional?) component of the renin system; (v) prorenin measurements are heavily influenced by methodological variations during the trypsin step or the subsequent PRA step; (vi) using standardized methodology, the rat can serve as a model for investigating the function of prorenin in normotension and hypertension.
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PMID:Activation and measurement of plasma prorenin in the rat. 175 34

The authors evaluated the assay performances and clinical usefulness of a newly developed solid phase radioimmunoassay (RIA) for total renin concentration (TRC) in human plasma. The direct total renin RIA was performed by a sandwich technique with a pair of anti-human renin monoclonal antibodies. Renin activation with trypsin did not change TRC. The RIA showed satisfactory assay performances and demonstrated full compatibility with a direct RIA-kit for active renin concentration (ARC) in human plasma. The values of TRC were 105.3 +/- 8.6 pg/mL in normal subjects and 136.5 +/- 14.6 pg/mL in patients with essential hypertension. The values of TRC and the ratios of ARC to TRC were high in patients with renovascular hypertension and were low in patients with primary aldosteronism. Although the TRC value in diabetic patients was 134.4 +/- 14.8 pg/mL, the ratio of ARC to TRC was low. The RIA procedure was simple since prior purification or activation of renin was not required. These results suggest that the total renin RIA and its combined use with the active renin RIA may be helpful in understanding the renin-angiotensin system in human plasma.
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PMID:Measurement of plasma total renin by the anti-human renin monoclonal antibodies. 177 17

A 54-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for the treatment of a tumor of the right chest wall. Clinical examination revealed hypertension, hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hyperaldosteronism and hyperreninemia. Computed tomography and an abdominal echogram indicated a tumor in the right phrenic area and two tumors in the retroperitoneum near the pancreas head. After the surgical resection of these tumors, the primary reninism was diminished. The pathological diagnosis of these tumors was leiomyosarcoma. Plasma active and inactive (trypsin-activated) renin activities (PRA) were 85.7 and 38.9 ng angiotensin I/ml/h, respectively. These PRA did not respond to either postural stimulation or suppression by the volume expansion. Active and inactive renin activities in a right phrenic area tumor were 208 and 32 ng angiotensin I/mg protein /h, respectively. Those of an abdominal tumor were 196 and 30 ng angiotensin I/mg protein/h, respectively. Renin mRNA identical in molecular size to that of the human kidney was identified by northern blot analysis. This is the first case report of renin producing leiomyosarcoma derived from the lung, which is characterized by relatively lower plasma prorenin concentrations.
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PMID:A case of renin producing leiomyosarcoma originating in the lung. 182 28


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