Author:
Sczodrok Jaroslaw,Lutze Philipp,Staar Doreen,Dörr Marcus,Peters Jörg
Abstract
AbstractSecretory renin promotes hypertrophy, apoptosis, necrosis and fibrosis through angiotensin generation. It has been claimed that local expression of renin contributes to the deleterious effects of the renin-angiotensin system in the heart. Besides the classic renin transcript (renin-a), encoding for secretory renin, a putative brain-specific (renin-b) and a putative lung-specific (renin-c) transcript may exist in human. In contrast to secretory renin, renin-b cannot be secreted, remains within the cytosol and is imported into mitochondria. In contradiction to renin-a, renin-b exerts cardioprotective effects in hearts and in cardiac cells of the rat under ischemia related conditions. To date, available data on cardiac renin expression remain inconsistent. Nobody has yet investigated which renin transcripts are expressed in the human heart. We systematically analyzed the levels of renin transcripts using specific and sensitive nested reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reactions (RT-PCR) in human ventricular biopsies obtained from patients with heart diseases. In the 33 biopsies available, neither the expression of classic renin-a, nor of the alternative renin-c was detected. In contrast, the renin-b transcript, which was previously classified as brain-specific, was found in 11/33 ventricular biopsies. Our data exclude the expression of secretory renin and indicate that local expression of cytosolic renin but not of secretory renin can play a functional role in the human heart.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory