Changes in Active and Inactive Renin throughout Pregnancy*

Abstract
In the first trimester of pregnancy, inactive renin in plasma rapidly increases (to 5times the average concentration in plasma of nonpregnant controls), then declines slowly until midpregnancy, and falls quickly to the normal range after delivery. Inactive renin has the same largeapparent molecular weight in pregnancy as in control plasma. Amniotic fluid contains very high levels of inactive renin; its mobility on Sephadex G-100 is the same as that of inactive plasma reninbut a lower molecular weight is indicated by the delayed elution of inactive renin of amniotic fluid from Sephacryl S-200. This anomalous behavior is probably responsible for the different estimates of molecular weight previously reported. The plasma concentration of active renin in pregnancy is modestly increased in the first trimester, declining gradually until term, and falling quickly after delivery. Although the increased PRA in early pregnancy involves an increase in active renin, increased angiotensinogen appears to play a more important part in sustaining the increased PRA of late pregnancy. The apparent molecularweight of the active renin in pregnancy plasma is larger than that in normal plasma. Gross changesin sodium intake during pregnancy result in changes in active and inactive renin concentrations parallel to those observed in nonpregnant controls. These responses suggest that the kidneys are an important source of the altered plasma renin in pregnancy, but do not exclude a contribution from other sources. (J Clin Endocrinol Metab54: 1010, 1982)

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: