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. 1983 Jul;37(1):32-40.
doi: 10.1159/000123512.

Angiotensin-converting enzyme in epithelial and neuroepithelial cells

Angiotensin-converting enzyme in epithelial and neuroepithelial cells

R Defendini et al. Neuroendocrinology. 1983 Jul.

Abstract

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (CE) occurs in three types of cell: endothelial, epithelial, and neuroepithelial. In all three, it appears to be bound to plasma membrane. With antisera to the human enzyme, CE is demonstrated in paraffin sections on the apical surface of epithelial cells in the proximal tubule of the kidney, the mucosa of the small intestine, the syncytial trophoblast of the placenta, and the choroid plexus. Epithelial CE is characteristically found on microvillous surfaces in contact with an effluent, well placed to act on substrate in flux. In the brain, CE occurs in nerve fibers and terminals, mainly mesiobasally and in basal ganglia. Mesiobasal CE coincides with other components of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) in the choroid/ventricular fluid, the subfornical organ, and the magnocellular neurosecretory system of the hypothalamus. Extrapyramidal CE, however, may not be related to the RAS. In the substantia nigra and the globus pallidus, the enzyme has the same cellular distribution as two putative neuromodulators, substance P and enkephalin, the latter a known substrate of CE.

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