13 research outputs found

    Human prorenin

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    Our interest in inactive renin originates from the observation that plasma renin can be activated by several apparently unrelated modes of treatment. Dialysis of plasma against a pH 3.3 buffer at 0 C for 24 hours followed by another 24 hours of dialysis at neutral pH causes a five-fold increase in renin activity. Renin activity of plasma is also increased, albeit to a lesser extent, when plasma is stored at 0 C without prior acidification. Finally, the addition of trypsin and some other proteases, such as plasma kallikrein and plasmin, to plasma also increases renin activity. Theoretically, the increase in the enzymatic activity of renin could occur by several mechanisms: 1) changes of the fluid milieu of the enzyme, for instance changes in pH, certain metal ions, chaotropic agents, 2) reversible binding of an activator to the active site or to an allosteric site of the enzyme molecule, 3) destruction of an inhibitor of renin or dissociation of the inhibitor moiety from a renin-inhibitor complex, 4) alteration of the primary structure of inactive renin by limited proteolysis. The last possibility of activation by limited proteolysis is in agreement with the concept of a proenzyme-enzyme conversion. The existence of inactive forms of renin with a molecular weight greater than that of active renin has been demonstrated in plasma but the Mr-figures that have been reported are widely different. Such a concept is also in agreement with the presence of an additional nucleotide sequence in mouse submandibulary renin and human kidney renin e-DNA, which may correspond toN-terminal amino acid sequences that belong to the so-called prepropart of renin. Furthermore, there is recent evidence that the propart amino acid sequence of human kidney prorenin is also present in inactive renin of human plasma. Prorenin-renin conversion, within or outside the juxtaglomerular cells where prorenin is synthesized, could be an important regulatory step in the renin-angiotensin system. With this in mind we have studied some biochemical aspects of the activation of inactive renin and addressed the the possible physiological and clinical significance by measurements of inactive renin in plasma and other body fluids. This thesis describes our contributions to this subject in the past five year

    Improved immunoradiometric assay for plasma renin

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    BACKGROUND: Our renin IRMA overestimated renin in plasmas with high prorenin-to-renin ratios. We suspected that the overestimation of renin was caused less by cross-reactivity of the renin-specific antibody with prorenin than by a conformational change of prorenin into an enzymatically active form during the assay. METHODS: Because the inactive form of prorenin converts slowly into an active form at low temperature, we raised the assay temperature from 22 degrees C to 37 degrees C, simultaneously shortening the incubation time from 24 to 6 h. The former IRMA was performed in <1 working day with these modifications. RESULTS: The comeasurement of prorenin as renin was eliminated. Reagents were stable at 37 degrees C, and the new and old IRMAs were comparable in terms of precision and accuracy. The functional lower limit of the assay (4 mU/L) was below the lower reference limit (9 mU/L). The modified IRMA agreed closely with the activities measured with an enzyme-kinetic assay. Results were not influenced by the plasma concentration of angiotensinogen. At normal angiotensinogen concentrations, the IRMA closely correlated with the classical enzyme-kinetic assay of plasma renin activity. CONCLUSION: The modified IRMA, performed at 37 degrees C, avoids interference by prorenin while retaining the desirable analytical characteristics of the older IRMA and requiring less time

    Human renal and systemic hemodynamic, natriuretic, and neurohumoral responses to different doses of L-NAME

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    Experimental evidence indicates that the renal circulation is more sensitive to the effects of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis inhibition than other vascular beds. To explore whether in men the NO-mediated vasodilator tone is greater in the renal than in the systemic circulation, the effects of three different intravenous infusions of NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 1, 5, and 25 microg. kg-1. min-1 for 30 min) or placebo on mean arterial pressure (MAP), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), renal blood flow (RBF), renal vascular resistance (RVR), glomerular filtration rate (GFR), and fractional sodium and lithium excretion (FENa and FELi) were studied in 12 healthy subjects, each receiving randomly two of the four treatments on two different occasions. MAP was measured continuously by means of the Finapres device, and stroke volume was calculated by a model flow method. GFR and RBF were estimated from the clearances of radiolabeled thalamate and hippuran. Systemic and renal hemodynamics were followed for 2 h after start of infusions. During placebo, renal and systemic hemodynamics and FENa and FELi remained stable. With the low and intermediate L-NAME doses, maximal increments in SVR and RVR were similar: 20.4 +/- 19.6 and 23.5 +/- 16.0%, respectively, with the low dose and 31.4 +/- 26.7 and 31.2 +/- 14.4%, respectively, with the intermediate dose (means +/- SD). With the high L-NAME dose, the increment in RVR was greater than the increment in SVR. Despite a decrease in RBF, FENa and FELi did not change with the low L-NAME dose, but they decreased by 31.2 +/- 11.0 and 20.2 +/- 6.3%, respectively, with the intermediate dose and by 70.8 +/- 8.1 and 31.5 +/- 15.9% with the high L-NAME dose, respectively. It is concluded that in men the renal circulation is not more sensitive to the effects of NO synthesis inhibition than the systemic circulation and that the threshold for NO synthesis inhibition to produce antinatriuresis is higher than the threshold level to cause renal vasoconstriction

    High renin and prorenin in plasma and pleural exudate of a patient with the ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome

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    We present the case of a 35-year-old woman with a severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) as a complication of ovulation induction for primary infertility. The clinical picture showed massively enlarged ovaries, pleural effusion and haemoconcentration. She needed a thoracentesis for evacuation of the large pleural effusion. High levels of renin and prorenin were observed in plasma and pleural exudate

    Free and total insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), IGF-binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1), and IGFBP-3 and their relationships to the presence of diabetic retinopathy and glomerular hyperfiltration in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus

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    The existing literature on serum insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) levels in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is conflicting. Free IGF-I may have greater physiological and clinical relevance than total IGF-I. Recently, a validated method has been developed to measure free IGF-I levels in the circulation. Serum free and total IGF-I, IGF-binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1), and IGFBP-3 levels were measured in 56 insulin-treated IDDM patients and 52 healthy sex- and age-matched controls. Diabetic retinopathy was established by direct fundoscopy. In 54 IDDM patients, the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and effective renal plasma flow were calculated from the clearance rate of [125I]iothalamate and [131I]iodohippurate sodium. Fasting free IGF-I, total IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 levels were significantly lower in IDDM patients than in age- and sex-matched healthy controls (free IGF-I, P < 0.005; total IGF-I, P < 0.001; IGFBP-3, P = 0.001), whereas IGFBP-1 levels were higher (P < 0.001). In IDDM subjects, decreases in free IGF-I, total IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 levels with age were observed (free IGF-I, r = -0.27 and P = 0.05; total IGF-I, r = -0.52 and P < 0.001; IGFBP-3, r = -0.37 and P = 0.005). Free IGF-I was inversely related to fasting glucose in IDDM subjects (r = -0.35; P = 0.01), whereas the relationship between total IGF-I and fasting glucose did not reach significance (r = -0.27; P = 0.06). Age-adjusted free IGF-I levels were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in IDDM subjects with retinopathy than in subjects without retinopathy after adjustment for age. Total IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels were positively related to GFR (total IGF-I, r = 0.35 and P < 0.05; IGFBP-3, r = 0.28 and P < 0.05). Both of these differences lost significance after adjustment for age. Free IGF-I, total IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 levels were lower and IGFBP-1 levels were higher in insulin-treated IDDM subjects compared to those in age- and sex-matched controls. Free IGF-I, total IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 levels decreased significantly with age in IDDM subjects. Age-adjusted free IGF-I levels in subjects with diabetic retinopathy were higher than those in subjects without diabetic retinopathy. Total IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels were positively related to GFR in IDDM subjects, but these relations were lost after adjustment for age. Measurement of serum free IGF-I levels in IDDM subjects did not have clear advantages compared to that of total IGF-I, IGFBP-1, and IGFBP-3 levels. Serum IGF-I and IGFBPs reflect their tissue concentrations to a various degree. Consequently, extrapolations concerning the pathogenetic role of the IGF/IGFBP system in the development of diabetic complications at the tissue level remain speculative

    High-affinity prorenin binding to cardiac man-6-P/IGF-II receptors precedes proteolytic activation to renin

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    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

    Prorenin accumulation and activation in human endothelial cells: importance of mannose 6-phosphate receptors

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    ACE inhibitors improve endothelial dysfunction, possibly by blocking endothelial angiotensin production. Prorenin, through its binding and activation by endothelial mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) receptors, may contribute to this production. Here, we investigated this possibility as well as prorenin activation kinetics, the nature of the prorenin-activating enzyme, and M6P receptor-independent prorenin binding. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were incubated with wild-type prorenin, K/A-2 prorenin (in which Lys42 is mutated to Ala, thereby preventing cleavage by known proteases), M6P-free prorenin, and nonglycosylated prorenin, with or without M6P, protease inhibitors, or angiotensinogen. HUVECs bound only M6P-containing prorenin (K(d) 0.9+/-0.1 nmol/L, maximum number of binding sites [B(max)] 1010+/-50 receptors/cell). At 37 degrees C, because of M6P receptor recycling, the amount of prorenin internalized via M6P receptors was >25 times B(max). Inside the cells, wild-type and K/A-2 prorenin were proteolytically activated to renin. Renin was subsequently degraded. Protease inhibitors interfered with the latter but not with prorenin activation, thereby indicating that the activating enzyme is different from any of the known prorenin-activating enzymes. Incubation with angiotensinogen did not lead to endothelial angiotensin generation, inasmuch as HUVECs were unable to internalize angiotensinogen. Most likely, therefore, in the absence of angiotensinogen synthesis or endocytosis, M6P receptor-mediated prorenin internalization by endothelial cells represents prorenin clearance

    Do older hospital patients recognize adverse drug reactions?

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    OBJECTIVE: To establish the relationship between subjective complaints of side effects of drugs and the objective presence of adverse drug reactions in older patients. DESIGN: Observational cross-sectional study. SETTING: Five medical wards at the University Hospital Rotterdam Dijkzigt. SUBJECTS: Patients aged 70 and over admitted to the general medical wards over a 3-month period. METHODS: Statistical comparison and Kramer's algorithm. RESULTS: Of 106 patients, 102 used medication, and 93 of these were able to report whether they believed they were experiencing drug side effects. Thirty-six [39% (95% confidence interval 28.8-48.6)] believed that they were experiencing side effects and the number of diagnoses per patient and the proportion of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was higher in these 36 'complainers' than in the group of the 'non-complainers'. We found a correct opinion (true positive and negative) about the objective presence or absence of mild or severe adverse drug reactions in 79% (95% confidence interval 70.2-86.8). Asking the patient about side effects of drugs had a sensitivity of 0.70 and a specificity of 0.85 patients. The severe adverse drug reactions in 21 patients were not recognized by 14 of them. CONCLUSION: At hospital admission, older patients should be asked about drug side effects because they are often correct in recognizing them. However, severe adverse drug reactions are not easily recognized
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