New perspectives in angiotensin system control.

Journal: Journal Of Human Hypertension
Published:
Abstract

The 'angiotensin system' is expressed at the whole body, organ/tissue and cellular levels through the action of angiotensin II at specific receptors. An appreciation of the full scope of the actions of angiotensin II (endocrine, paracrine and autocrine) has been made possible by the discovery of the non-peptide angiotensin II receptor antagonists, losartan (DuP 753/MK954)(AT1-selective) and PD123177 (AT2-selective). Virtually all of the known effects of angiotensin II are blocked by losartan and designated AT1. Selective AT1 receptor blockade with losartan lowers BP in angiotensin II-dependent models of hypertension, reduces cardiac hypertrophy, improves haemodynamics in models of cardiac failure and reduces the intimal response to vascular injury. AT2 sites have been localised in distinct parts of the brain and in foetal tissue. The functional role of the AT2 sites remains controversial, but possible roles in neuronal ion channel function and collagen metabolism in fibroblasts have been reported. AT1 (losartan-sensitive) receptor subtypes have now been cloned from several rat tissues, suggesting that selective agents of the future may be even more specifically targeted. New perspectives in the control of the angiotensin system continue to evolve rapidly as the new receptor antagonists and molecular biology techniques expand our understanding of angiotensin II.

Authors
P Timmermans, P Wong, A Chiu, W Herblin, R Smith