Abstract
Angiotensin II (ANG II) generation in the mesenteric arteries was studied in four groups of rats: deoxycorticosterone (DOCA)/salt treated, glucocorticoid treated, nephrectomized and control rats. Basal plasma renin activity (PRA) was undetectable in the nephrectomized group and suppressed in the DOCA/salt treated rats, but was increased in the rats treated with glucocorticoid. The Basal plasma ANG II concentration changed comparably with PRA in all four groups of rats. In the control rats, ANG II was released from the mesenteric arteries at a rate of 43.0±12.0pg/h, and it was not decreased by nephrectomy. In DOCA/salt rats and glucocorticoid rats, ANG II release significantly decreased to 12.8±7.1 and 6.9±1.5pg/h, respectively. Captopril treatment significantly reduced ANG II release from the mesenteric arteries in both controls and nephrectomized rats, but did not influence ANG II output in DOCA/salt rats or in glucocorticoid treated rats. In nephrectomized rats, captopril lowered blood pressure in association with a significant reduction in the mesenteric ANG II formation. These results indicate that the renal and vascular renin-angiotensin system (RAS) may be independently regulated, and in nephrectomized animals the vascular RAS contributes in part to the maintenance of blood pressure. The present results also suggest that volume expansion per se and/or pharmacological intervention by DOCA and glucocorticoid could modulate vascular ANG II generation.