Renal injury from angiotensin II-mediated hypertension.

Abstract
Angiotensin II (Ang II)-mediated hypertension induces vascular smooth muscle cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia in systemic blood vessels, but the effects of Ang II on the intrinsic cell populations within the kidney have been less well characterized. We infused Ang II for 14 days into rats by minipump at doses (200 ng/min) that resulted in moderate hypertension (mean systolic blood pressure 156-172 mm Hg). Small renal arterial vessels of Ang II-infused rats demonstrated focal injury with fibrinoid necrosis and medial hyperplasia, whereas the glomerular capillaries demonstrated only rare segmental hyalinosis. Proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells was pronounced (fourfold to 20-fold increase in [3H]thymidine incorporation) as opposed to a minimal proliferation of glomerular cells in Ang II-infused rats. In contrast, the principal effect of Ang II in glomeruli was to increase the expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin by mesangial cells and desmin by visceral glomerular epithelial cells. Ang II-infus...