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Prorenin is the endogenous agonist of the (pro)renin receptor. Binding kinetics of renin and prorenin in rat vascular smooth muscle cells overexpressing the human (pro)renin receptor

Item Type:Article
Title:Prorenin is the endogenous agonist of the (pro)renin receptor. Binding kinetics of renin and prorenin in rat vascular smooth muscle cells overexpressing the human (pro)renin receptor
Creators Name:Batenburg, W.W., Krop, M., Garrelds, I.M., de Vries, R., de Bruin, R.J.A., Burckle, C.A., Mueller, D.N., Bader, M., Nguyen, G. and Danser, A.H.J.
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: Mannose 6-phosphate receptors (M6PR) bind both renin and prorenin, and such binding contributes to renin/prorenin clearance but not to angiotensin generation. Here, we evaluated the kinetics of renin/prorenin binding to the recently discovered human (pro)renin receptor (h(P)RR), and the idea that such binding underlies tissue angiotensin generation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Vascular smooth muscle cells from control rats and transgenic rats with smooth muscle h(P)RR overexpression were incubated at 4 or 37 degrees C with human renin or prorenin. Incubation at 37 degrees C greatly increased binding, suggesting that (pro)renin-binding receptors cycle between the intracellular compartment and the cell surface. Blockade of the M6PR reduced binding by approximately 50%. During M6PR blockade, h(P)RR cells bound twice as much prorenin as control cells, while renin binding was unaltered. Incubation of h(P)RR (but not control) cells with prorenin + angiotensinogen yielded more angiotensin than expected on the basis of the activity of soluble prorenin, whereas angiotensin generation during incubation of both cell types with renin + angiotensinogen was entirely due to soluble renin. The renin + angiotensinogen-induced vasoconstriction of isolated iliac arteries from control and transgenic rats was also due to soluble renin only. The recently proposed (P)RR antagonist 'handle region peptide', which resembles part of the prosegment, blocked neither prorenin binding nor angiotensin generation. CONCLUSIONS: H(P)RRs preferentially bind prorenin, and such binding results in angiotensin generation, most likely because binding results in prorenin activation.
Keywords:Angiotensin, Prorenin, Receptor, Renin, Transgenic, Animals, Rats
Source:Journal of Hypertension
ISSN:0263-6352
Publisher:Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Volume:25
Number:12
Page Range:2441-2453
Date:December 2007
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1097/HJH.0b013e3282f05bae
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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