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Journal ArticleDOI

Human skin: source of and target organ for angiotensin II.

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TLDR
The findings suggest that the complete renin–angiotensin system is present in human skin and plays a role in normal cutaneous homeostasis as well as in human cutaneous wound healing.
Abstract
The present study examined the expression of angiotensin receptors in human skin, the potential synthesis of angiotensin II (Ang II) in this location and looked for a first insight into physiological functions. AT1 and AT2 receptors were found within the epidermis and in dermal vessel walls. The same expression pattern was found for angiotensinogen, renin and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE). All components could additionally be demonstrated at mRNA level in cultured primary keratinocytes, melanocytes, dermal fibroblasts and dermal microvascular endothelial cells, except for AT2 receptors in melanocytes. The ability of cutaneous cells to synthesize Ang II was proved by identifying the molecule in cultured keratinocytes. Furthermore, in artificially wounded keratinocyte monolayers, ACE-mRNA expression was rapidly increased, and enhanced ACE expression was still found in cutaneous human scars 3 months after wounding. These findings suggest that the complete renin-angiotensin system is present in human skin and plays a role in normal cutaneous homeostasis as well as in human cutaneous wound healing.

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Citations
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TL;DR: Together, a close multidirectional interaction between neuromediators, high-affinity receptors, and regulatory proteases is critically involved to maintain tissue integrity and regulate inflammatory responses in the skin.
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The AT2 receptor--a matter of love and hate.

TL;DR: The present review summarizes the current knowledge of AT2 receptor distribution, signaling and function with an emphasis on growth/anti-growth, differentiation and the regeneration of neuronal tissue.
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Angiotensin II and the vascular phenotype in hypertension.

TL;DR: Recent developments and new research trends related to Ang II and the RAS and involvement in the hypertensive vascular phenotype are focused on.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical role of cardiac fibroblast-derived exosomes in activating renin angiotensin system in cardiomyocytes.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Ang II stimulates CFs to release exosomes, which in turn increase Ang II production and its receptor expression in cardiomyocytes, thereby intensifying Ang II-induced pathological cardiac hypertrophy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of ANG II with other growth factors on Egr-1 and matrix gene expression in cardiac fibroblasts.

TL;DR: Angiotensin II appears to play a prominent and direct role in fibroblast changes associated with cardiac hypertrophy, whereas EGF only induces Egr-1, and NE and ET have no effects on either function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of angiotensin receptors on human skin fibroblasts.

TL;DR: C cultured human skin fibroblasts express angiotensin AT1 receptors and a putatively new angiotsin receptor activated by ang Elliotensin(1–7), both coupled to signaling pathways involved in DNA synthesis.
Book ChapterDOI

Angiotensin II in cell growth and matrix production.

TL;DR: An overall theme that emerges is the impact of AII on both growth and wound repair.
Journal ArticleDOI

Histologic alterations in dermal repair after thermal injury effects of topical angiotensin II.

TL;DR: The effect of administration of angiotensin II (AII) on two histologic parameters of healing-the number of vascular channels at the burn site and the number of cells proliferation in hair follicles at the edge of the burn and within the burn-were evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Angiotensin II stimulates growth and steroidogenesis in zona fasciculata/reticularis cells from bovine adrenal cortex via the AT1 receptor subtype

TL;DR: The steroidogenic and mitogenic effects of AII in bovine zfr cells are mediated by the AT1 receptor, and the pA2 values for saralasin and DuP753 were at least one order of magnitude less potent than previous measurements in rabbit vascular smooth muscle.
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