The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) functions as a primary regulator in the short-term and long-term control of blood pressure. Pharmacologic inhibition of the RAS with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition is effective for treating systemic hypertension and congestive heart failure. As a more specific therapy, the development of renin inhibitors has evolved through various approaches: specific renin antibodies, peptides developed from prosegments of renin precursor, oligopeptides related to pepstatin a universal inhibitor of aspartyl proteinase enzyme, and analogs of angiotensinogen (the renin substrate). Angiotensinogen analogs are promising as therapeutic agents because of high potency, metabolic stability, and good oral bioavailability. Ongoing research is directed towards the application of renin inhibition, the treatment of various cardiovascular disorders, and as a biological probe for understanding the role of the RAS in control of blood pressure and blood volume.
The effect of alpha- and beta-adrenergic agonists on renal and submaxillary renin of different molecular weights was studied using male albino mice as experimental animals. Phenylephrine or isoproterenol was administered intravenously after removal of the submaxillary glands and/or kidneys. Renin was isolated from plasma by column chromatography and then measured by a direct radioimmunoassay. Phenylephrine increased both 68,500-dalton renin (big renin) and 38,000-dalton renin (small renin) in the plasma of nephrectomized mice. Isoproterenol increased big and small renin in the plasma of mice whose submaxillary glands were removed. In both cases, the increase of small renin was significantly greater than that of big renin. The results suggest that the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine affects the submaxillary gland, leading to the increase of both big and small plasma renin. In contrast, the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol affects the kidney, leading to the increase of both big and small plasma renin.
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