Placental Aminopeptidase A as a Possible Barrier of Angiotensin II between Mother and Fetus

2000 
Abstract Aminopeptidase A (AP-A EC 3.4.11.7), which is a membrane-bound zinc metalloprotease, is present in the placenta. AP-A selectively hydrolyzes N-terminal glutamyl and aspartyl residues and cleaves angiotensin II to form angiotensin III. To determine the role of placental aminopeptidase A under physiological and pathological conditions, we evaluated its immunolocalization and enzymatic activities in the placenta. AP-A was localized in the basal zone of the syncytiotrophoblast, in the membranes of the cytotrophoblast, and in fetal arterioles and venules within the stem villi. AP-A activity in the microsomal fraction of placental villi seemed to be remained essentially constant throughout gestation. The renin–angiotensin system is considered to be accelerated in pre-eclampsia. This AP-A activity was higher in pre-eclampsia (2.86±0.30 nmol β NA/mg protein/h) than in uncomplicated pregnancy from 28 to 41 weeks of gestation (2.08±0.18 nmol β NA/mg protein/h). Angiotensin II evoked AP-A activity in first trimester trophoblast, and Losartan and PD 123177 in combination significantly inhibited this induction of AP-A activity. The results of immunohistochemical evaluation and enzymatic activity suggested that placental aminopeptidase A may play a role as a component of the barrier of angiotensin II between mother and fetus.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    36
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []