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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitor Ramiprilat Interferes With the Sequestration of the B 2 Kinin Receptor Within the Plasma Membrane of Native Endothelial Cells

Thomas BenzingRudi BusseAndree BlaukatIngrid FlemingWerner Müller-esterl

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyReceptor Bradykinin B2SwineBradykininAngiotensin-Converting Enzyme InhibitorsPharmacologyBradykininchemistry.chemical_compoundRamiprilPhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicineAnimalsCalcium SignalingBradykinin receptorReceptorAortaMitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 1Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 3biologyReceptors BradykininMembrane ProteinsBiological TransportAngiotensin-converting enzymeKininAngiotensin IIEndothelial stem cellEndocrinologychemistryCalcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinasesbiology.proteinEndothelium VascularMitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineRamiprilatSignal Transduction

description

Background —ACE (kininase II) inhibitors have been shown to exert their beneficial cardiovascular effects via the inhibition of both angiotensin II formation and bradykinin breakdown. Because recent evidence suggests that ACE inhibitors may also interfere with B 2 kinin receptor signaling and thus enhance the vascular response to bradykinin, we examined whether the distribution of B 2 kinin receptors within the plasma membrane of native endothelial cells is affected by an ACE inhibitor. Methods and Results —Localization of the B 2 kinin receptor in membranes prepared from native porcine aortic endothelial cells was evaluated by means of specific [ 3 H]bradykinin binding and immunoprecipitation of the B 2 receptor from isolated membranes. Effects of bradykinin and ramiprilat on intracellular signaling were determined by monitoring the activation of the extracellularly regulated kinases Erk1 and Erk2 as well as [Ca 2+ ] i increases in fura 2–loaded endothelial cells. Stimulation of native endothelial cells with bradykinin 100 nmol/L resulted in the time-dependent sequestration of the B 2 receptor to caveolin-rich (CR) membranes, which was maximal after 5 minutes. Pretreatment with ramiprilat 100 nmol/L for 15 minutes significantly attenuated the recovery of B 2 kinin receptors in CR membranes while increasing that from membranes lacking caveolin. This effect was not due to the inhibition of bradykinin degradation, because no effect was seen in the presence of an inhibitory concentration of the synthetic ACE substrate hippuryl- l -histidyl- l -leucine. Ramiprilat also decreased [ 3 H]bradykinin binding to CR membranes when applied either before or after bradykinin stimulation. Moreover, ramiprilat resulted in reactivation of the B 2 receptor in bradykinin-stimulated cells and induced a second peak in [Ca 2+ ] i and reactivation of Erk1/2. Conclusions —The ACE inhibitor ramiprilat interferes with the targeting of the B 2 kinin receptor to CR membrane domains in native endothelial cells. Therefore, effects other than the inhibition of kininase II may account for the effects of ramiprilat and other ACE inhibitors on the vascular system.

https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.99.15.2034