Cellular distribution of angiotensin-converting enzyme after myocardial infarction. Falkenhahn, M, et al. Hypertension, 25: 219-26 (1995)
1994
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We studied the cellular distribution of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) in the heart related to the cell types involved in left ventricular repair and remodeling before and after myocardial infarction by immunohistochemical techniques using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. In noninfarcted myocardium of both human and rat, ACE expression was confined to endothelial cells and subendocardial cell layers of the aortic valve. ACE was prominent in endothelia of small arteries and arterioles, whereas only half the coronary capillaries were immunoreactive and venous vessels were almost completely devoid of the enzyme. In a rat model of myocardial infarction, ACE distribution was determined 1, 3, and 7 days and 2, 3, and 6 weeks after coronary occlusion. Three and 7 days after infarction, endothelial cells of sprouting capillaries and macrophages in the marginal zone of necrosis revealed ACE expression. In both human and rat with the onset of fibrosis, intense staining of the enzyme was found in the marginal zone of the repair tissue. In situ hybridization for collagen type I in the rat revealed that zones with high collagen content had almost no ACE immunoreactivity. Vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiomyocytes revealed no ACE expression throughout the study. We conclude that endothelial cells are the principal source for the expression of ACE after myocardial infarction. The observed induction of ACE with the onset of fibrosis suggests a role of this enzyme that is related to tissue repair and remodeling. | 7531176
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Angiotensin converting enzyme expression is increased in small pulmonary arteries of rats with hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. Morrell, N W, et al. J. Clin. Invest., 96: 1823-33 (1995)
1994
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Previous studies suggest that while lung angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity is reduced during chronic hypoxia, inhibitors of ACE attenuate hypoxic pulmonary hypertension. In an attempt to explain this paradox we investigated the possibility that whole lung ACE activity may not reflect local pulmonary vascular ACE expression. The experimental approach combined in vivo hemodynamic studies in control and chronically hypoxic rats, measurement of whole lung ACE activity, and evaluation of local pulmonary vascular ACE expression by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Total lung ACE activity was reduced to 50% of control activity by 5 d of hypoxia and remained low for the duration of the study. Immunohistochemistry showed a marked reduction of ACE staining in alveolar capillary endothelium. However, an increase in ACE staining was observed in the walls of small newly muscularized pulmonary arteries at the level of alveolar ducts and walls. In situ hybridization studies showed increased signal for ACE mRNA in the same vessels. Inhibition of ACE by captopril during chronic hypoxia attenuated pulmonary hypertension and markedly reduced distal muscularization of small pulmonary arteries. In addition, we demonstrated marked longitudinal variation in ACE expression along the normal pulmonary vasculature with the highest levels found in small muscular arteries associated with terminal and respiratory bronchioles. We conclude that local ACE expression is increased in the walls of small pulmonary arteries during the development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension, despite a generalized reduction in alveolar capillary ACE expression, and we speculate that local arteriolar ACE may play a role in the vascular remodeling associated with pulmonary hypertension. | 7560074
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Structure-function analysis of angiotensin I-converting enzyme using monoclonal antibodies. Selective inhibition of the amino-terminal active site. Danilov, S, et al. J. Biol. Chem., 269: 26806-14 (1994)
1993
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Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE; kininase II) contains two very similar domains (the NH2- and COOH-terminal domains (N and C domains, respectively)), each bearing an active site. These active sites hydrolyze the same peptides, but do not have the same catalytic properties and substrate specificities. In an attempt to develop domain-specific immunological probes, two series of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), 19 clones in all, were produced and tested against human ACE. These mAbs recognized at least nine different epitopes within three antigenic regions of the ACE molecule. Testing on wild-type recombinant ACE and several mutants with only one intact domain showed that these epitopes were all located in the N domain. None of the mAbs recognized the C domain. This particular specificity and analysis of results obtained with several polyclonal antibodies to human ACE suggest that ACE immunogenicity is determined mainly by the N domain. Two mAbs (3A5 and i2H5) recognizing epitopes from different antigenic regions of ACE inhibited the enzymatic activity of the N (but not of the C) domain. mAb 3A5 had the same inhibitory potency toward hippuryl-His-Leu, benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-His-Leu, and angiotensin I hydrolysis, with 50% inhibition achieved at a mAb/ACE molar ratio of 6. mAb i2H5 was roughly three times more effective than mAb 3A5 inhibiting the hydrolysis of benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-His-Leu and the natural substrates angiotensin I and bradykinin (50% inhibition at a molar ratio of 1-2), but was less effective in inhibiting hippuryl-His-Leu cleavage (50% inhibition at a molar ratio of 22-25), indicating that this substrate interacts with a specific subsite. mAb i2H5 almost completely inhibited the hydrolysis of the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone by the isolated N domain. Both the primary carboxyl- and amino-terminal cleavages of this peptide were suppressed. This antibody suppressed the primary amino-terminal cleavage of the luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone by wild-type ACE by > 90%, indicating that this particular ACE function is mediated mainly by the N domain active site. These data provide evidence for structural differences between the two homologous domains of ACE despite their high degree of sequence homology and show that monoclonal antibodies are able to distinguish between the two active sites in ACE. | 7523412
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Immunohistochemical study of angiotensin-converting enzyme in human tissues using monoclonal antibodies. Danilov, S M, et al. Histochemistry, 87: 487-90 (1987)
1987
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The localization of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) in human tissues has been studied by the PAP-method with the use of monoclonal antibody 9 B9 against human lung ACE. The enzyme was detected on the surface of endothelial cells in lung, myocardium, liver, intestine and testis as well as in the epithelial cells of the kidney proximal tubules and intestine. The monoclonal antibody 9 B9 did not react with ACE in the epithelial cells of the testis seminiferous tubules. These data suggest that the antibody 9 B9 recognizes epitope which is shared by the ACE molecule of endothelial cells and renal and intestinal epithelial cells but is not present in testicular ACE, or is not accessible there to the antibody. | 2828286
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