Angiotensin induces the urinary peristaltic machinery during the perinatal period.

Y Miyazaki, S Tsuchida, H Nishimura… - The Journal of …, 1998 - Am Soc Clin Investig
Y Miyazaki, S Tsuchida, H Nishimura, JCT Pope, RC Harris, JM McKanna, T Inagami…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1998Am Soc Clin Investig
The embryonic development of mammalian kidneys is completed during the perinatal period
with a dramatic increase in urine production, as the burden of eliminating nitrogenous
metabolic waste shifts from the placenta to the kidney. This urine is normally removed by
peristaltic contraction of the renal pelvis, a smooth muscle structure unique to placental
mammals. Mutant mice completely lacking angiotensin type 1 receptor genes do not
develop a renal pelvis, resulting in the buildup of urine and progressive kidney damage. In …
The embryonic development of mammalian kidneys is completed during the perinatal period with a dramatic increase in urine production, as the burden of eliminating nitrogenous metabolic waste shifts from the placenta to the kidney. This urine is normally removed by peristaltic contraction of the renal pelvis, a smooth muscle structure unique to placental mammals. Mutant mice completely lacking angiotensin type 1 receptor genes do not develop a renal pelvis, resulting in the buildup of urine and progressive kidney damage. In mutants the ureteral smooth muscle layer is hypoplastic and lacks peristaltic movements. We show that angiotensin can induce the ureteral smooth muscles in organ cultures of wild-type, but not mutant, ureteral tissues and that, in wild-type mice, expression of both renal angiotensin and the receptor are transiently upregulated at the renal outlet at birth. These results reveal a new role for angiotensin in the unique cellular adaptations of the mammalian kidney to the physiological stresses of postnatal life.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation