Suppressing kidney angiotensinogen in blood pressure regulation
نویسنده
چکیده
The classical renin–angiotensin system (RAS) is activated by renin that is secreted from the juxtaglomerular cells of the afferent arteriole, which cleaves angiotensinogen (Agt), synthesized and released by the liver. This leads to the generation of a potent biologically active peptide, angiotensin II (AngII), which contributes to blood pressure regulation and sodium homeostasis. Recent studies have gone beyond the classical RAS pathway, to suggest that local production of RAS, particularly in the kidney, is essential for salt and water homeostasis and blood pressure regulation. Current evidence indicates that all RAS components necessary to generate Ang II are locally produced in most nephron segments (Rohrwasser et al. 1999), and can do so, independently from the classical RAS pathway (Kobori et al. 2007). Inappropriate activation of these components may lead to the development of hypertension or chronic kidney disease and thus, it is important to understand the regulation of the local kidney RAS system. Agt in the kidney is primarily synthesized in the proximal tubule (PT) (Ding et al. 1997). For example, transgenic mice that overexpress human Agt, under a human Agt promoter, have high levels of human Agt selectively in the PT (Ding et al. 1997). Upregulation of Agt in the PT appears to be physiologically significant, since mice overexpressing Agt, specifically in the PT, develop salt-sensitive hypertension (Ying et al. 2012). Agt synthesized in the PT is released into the tubular lumen, resulting in generation of AngII. Interestingly, AngII appears to stimulate further synthesis of Agt in the PT, perpetuating intrarenal RAS activity (Kobori et al. 2007). Therefore, Agt in the urine maybe a biomarker reflecting intrarenal RAS activity (Kobori et al. 2002), while targeting Agt in proximal tubules may have an important implication in blood pressure regulation (Ramkumar and Kohan 2013). Although Agt is synthesized in the PT, the major source of proximal tubular Agt, which leads to the generation of kidney AngII, is controversial. For example, in vivo visualization of glomerular permeability to Agt using twophoton microscopy in normal mice and proteinuric rats demonstrated that systemic administration of uncleavable fluorescent-labeled human Agt was minimally detected in the urine, indicating that Agt primarily originates from the tubules rather than from glomerular filtration (Nakano et al. 2012). On the other hand, Matsusaka and coworkers demonstrated that although there were no changes in urinary Agt levels, kidney Agt and AngII levels were decreased in liver-specific Agt knockout (KO) mice compared to kidney-specific Agt KO mice (Matsusaka et al. 2012). Notably, these liver-specific Agt KO mice were hypotensive, but blood pressure in kidney-specific KO mice were normal, suggesting Agt in the PT primarily derives from the liver and contributes to local AngII generation and systemic blood pressure. However, there is some uncertainty as to whether the kidney androgen-regulated protein promoter, used to specifically KO Agt in the kidney, is capable of fully deleting Agt in the proximal tubules. This is especially true since urinary Agt levels were not suppressed in their study (Matsusaka et al. 2012). In addition, whether inhibiting Agt specifically in the PT effects blood pressure under conditions of high levels of circulating AngII is currently unknown. In this current issue, Ramkumar et al. (2016) created a nephron-wide Agt KO mice by cross breeding a Agt floxed allele mouse (Matsusaka et al. 2012) to a mouse with Pax8-rtTA and LC-1 transgene. This tetracycline/ doxycycline-inducible mouse is under control of the mouse Pax8 promoter with high expression of the reverse tetracycline transactivator (rtTA) in all segments of the nephron (Traykova-Brauch et al. 2008). LC-1 is a transgene which encodes tetracycline/doxycycline-inducible cre and luciferase (Sch€ onig et al. 2002). Administering doxycycline triggers rtTA to bind to LC-1 transgene, leading to expression of luciferase and cre recombinase in the renal tubular cells, which enables Agt to be specifically deleted in renal epithelial cells. These mice indeed show reduced expression of Agt mRNA and protein levels in the proximal tubules, decreased plasma/urinary Agt levels, and increased plasma renin concentration. These findings were true regardless of different salt intakes. Most importantly, systolic blood pressure was significantly lower
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