Similarity between active and trypsin-activated inactive renin in dog plasma by means of renin inhibition: the dog as an animal model for studies of inactive renin.
1988
: A method for trypsin-activation of dog plasma inactive renin is described. Liquid phase trypsin (final concentration 6.7 mg/ml) was used and the reaction was stopped after 2 min at 4 degrees C by soybean trypsin inhibitor (13 mg/ml). Renin was measured as angiotensin I (Ang I) generation in trypsin-treated and untreated plasma using the antibody-trapping method, in the presence of excess ox renin substrate. The renin-like activity after trypsin was indeed due to renin, since Ang I generation in dog plasma before and after trypsin treatment was completely inhibited by H-77 at 10(-6) mol/l, and the two IC50 values were very similar (2.7 +/- 0.7 and 2.9 +/- 0.7 at 10(-8) mol/l, respectively). Dog plasma inactive renin was effectively separated from active renin by chromatography on Affigel Blue. Like human prorenin, dog plasma inactive renin rose in response to sodium depletion (furosemide 5 mg/kg, i.v.) followed by a low-salt diet (1 mmol Na+/day) for 4 days, (from 29.6 +/- 8 to 162 +/- 22 microU/ml; P less than 0.01, n = 10). Active renin also increased as expected. Intravenous captopril (6 mg/kg per h), for 3 h, led to a sharp increase in dog plasma active renin (from 53 +/- 8 to 360 +/- 60 microU/ml; P less than 0.01, n = 6), whereas inactive renin remained unchanged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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