• Circulation · May 1993

    Review

    Tissue renin-angiotensin systems. Their role in cardiovascular disease.

    • M A Lee, M Böhm, M Paul, and D Ganten.
    • German Institute for High Blood Pressure Research, University of Heidelberg.
    • Circulation. 1993 May 1; 87 (5 Suppl): IV7-13.

    BackgroundThe identification of the components of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) in various extrarenal tissues suggested the existence of local renin-angiotensin systems with organ-specific functions that may act independently from the plasma RAS. These findings have led to the hypothesis of paracrine-autocrine functions of the RAS, which implies that locally generated angiotensin II mediates effects within one tissue or within one cell. Whereas the circulating endocrine RAS appears to be responsible for acute effects, the tissue RAS seems to participate in more chronic processes such as secondary structural changes and therefore may contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension as well as other cardiovascular disorders such as cardiac hypertrophy, coronary artery disease, and atherosclerosis.Methods And ResultsThe use of molecular biological techniques has demonstrated that all components of the RAS-renin, angiotensinogen, converting enzyme, and angiotensin receptors-are expressed in several tissues that participate in the regulation of cardiovascular homeostasis.ConclusionsThe therapeutic importance of inhibitors of the RAS, such as converting enzyme inhibitors, is based on their cardioprotective as well as antiproliferative effects and points to a direct involvement of the RAS in the development and preservation of primary hypertension, a pathological condition in which normal or even low plasma renin activity is a common finding. Reversal of cardiovascular structural changes and enhancement of renal sodium excretion by converting enzyme inhibitors are important long-term antihypertensive actions possibly mediated by inhibition of the tissue RAS.

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