Renin release: sites, mechanisms, and control

A Kurtz - Annual review of physiology, 2011 - annualreviews.org
A Kurtz
Annual review of physiology, 2011annualreviews.org
In the adult organism, systemically circulating renin almost exclusively originates from the
juxtaglomerular cells in the afferent arterioles of the kidneys. These cells share similarities
with pericytes and myofibro-blasts. They store renin in a vesicular network and granules and
release it in a regulated fashion. The release mode of renin is not understood; in particular,
the involvement of SNARE proteins is unknown. Renin release is acutely increased via the
cAMP signaling pathway, which is triggered mainly by catecholamines and other Gs …
In the adult organism, systemically circulating renin almost exclusively originates from the juxtaglomerular cells in the afferent arterioles of the kidneys. These cells share similarities with pericytes and myofibro-blasts. They store renin in a vesicular network and granules and release it in a regulated fashion. The release mode of renin is not understood; in particular, the involvement of SNARE proteins is unknown. Renin release is acutely increased via the cAMP signaling pathway, which is triggered mainly by catecholamines and other Gs-coupled agonists, and is inhibited by calcium-related pathways that are commonly activated by vasoconstrictors. Renin release from juxtaglomerular cells is directly modulated in an inverse fashion by the blood pressure inside the afferent arterioles and by the chloride content in the tubule fluid at the macula densa segment of the distal tubule. Renin release is stimulated by nitric oxide and by prostanoids released by neighboring endothelial and macula densa cells. Steady-state renin concentrations in the plasma are determined essentially by the number of renin-producing cells in the afferent arterioles, which changes in parallel with challenges to the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
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