Abstract

In order to provide a convenient in vitro assay for renin activity, a radiolabeled renin substrate analog, N-acetyl-Asn-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-[ 3H]-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-Ser-Gly-Lys-Pro-OH, was prepared by solid-phase synthesis. The substrate peptide was bound covalently to agarose through the ϵ-amino group of its lysine residue. Incubation of this insoluble complex with partially purified hog renin resulted in the release of biologically active tritiated peptide into the soluble phase of the incubation mixture, at a rate proportional to the quantity of renin added. The optimum pH for cleavage was 6.5. The apparent K m of the substrate was 1 × 10 −4 M, and the V max was 83 pmoles tritiated peptide released/min/mg renin preparation added. The minimum amount of renin detectable by the assay was 2 μg, a quantity that would be expected to generate 1.0 pmole angiotensin per minute from the natural plasma substrate. Chymotrypsin, trypsin, papain, and pseudorenin, were also effective in cleaving labeled peptides from the insoluble substrate, but leucine aminopeptidase did not appear to release soluble radioactivity. The assay, as described, is useful for the measurement of large numbers of renin samples because of the speed and ease with which it may be performed. It is not yet sufficiently sensitive nor specific to measure the low levels of renin found in plasma.

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