LOCAL RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEM - ESPECIALLY IN COAGULATING GLANDS OF MICE

Authors
Citation
Y. Kon, LOCAL RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEM - ESPECIALLY IN COAGULATING GLANDS OF MICE, Archives of histology and cytology, 59(5), 1996, pp. 399-420
Citations number
212
Categorie Soggetti
Cell Biology
ISSN journal
09149465
Volume
59
Issue
5
Year of publication
1996
Pages
399 - 420
Database
ISI
SICI code
0914-9465(1996)59:5<399:LRS-EI>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
It is well known that the renin-angiotensin system (RES) is involved i n the control of blood pressure. Recently, all or part of the componen ts concerning the RAS have been reported to be synthesized and secrete d outside of classical organs or tissues, at sites including the brain , pituitary and pineal glands, eye, heart, adrenal gland, testes, ovar y, placenta, and coagulating glands. The functions and roles of these local RAS are not well known. In the present review, the author explai ns the history of the RAS, the circulating RAS and the existence of lo cal RAS in multiple organs and tissues, discussing especially the func tion of coagulating gland renin. Renin protein, the triggering enzyme of the RAS, is distributed generally in certain fixed cells of several organs and tissues, exemplified by the gonadotrops in the pituitary g lands and Leydig cells in the testis. Renin mRNA and its expressing ce lls can also be detected from the above cells as a whole. In some tiss ues, angiotensinogen-containing cells do not, however, correspond to i ts mRNA-expressing cells and potent activator angiotensin II-containin g cells, as, for example, in the brain. These cases are explained by c onstitutive pathways of angiotensinogen processing. Coagulating gland renin, which the author is investigating vigorously, is the most recen tly discovered local renin, and represents significant subject for inv estigations. It is suggested that coagulating gland renin may play an unique function for sexual organs by exocrine mechanism.