Affiliation:
1. Department of Medical and Molecular Physiology, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Duluth 55812; Division of Nephrology, Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis 55415; and Departments of Physiology and Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
Abstract
Plasma and left ventricular (LV) renin and angiotensinogen concentrations were assessed in a rat model of pressure-overload cardiac hypertrophy to determine if myocardial levels remained proportional to plasma levels over time. Three days after subdiaphragmatic aortic constriction (AC), LV hypertrophy was evident and renin concentrations in both plasma and LV, although not significantly elevated, were positively correlated with relative cardiac mass. After 42 days AC, LV hypertrophy remained, plasma and LV renin and angiotensinogen levels were not different from shams, and there was no correlation between renin and relative cardiac mass. Furthermore, LV renin and angiotensinogen concentrations remained at ∼25 and 4%, respectively, of those in plasma throughout the experiment. Myocytes from 3-day AC and sham-treated rats contained little renin as did LV from 48-h anephric rats. Incubations using calculated concentrations of myocardial interstitial renin and angiotensinogen revealed significant angiotensin I generation. These data suggest that LV renin in this model varies directly with plasma renin, is confined to the interstitial space, and can generate significant intramyocardial angiotensin I.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
39 articles.
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