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Vol. 292, Issue 1, 295-298, January 2000
Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University Medical
Center, Nashville, Tennessee (K.-S.K., S.K., N.J.B.); and Department of
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, Loyola University Chicago, Stritch
School of Medicine, Maywood, Illinois (W.H.S.)
Bradykinin is a nonapeptide that contributes to the cardioprotective
effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. During ACE
inhibition, an increased proportion of bradykinin is degraded through
non-ACE pathways. Studies in animals suggest that aminopeptidase P (EC
3.4.11.9) may contribute to the metabolism of bradykinin. The purpose
of the present study was to determine the contribution of
aminopeptidase P to the degradation of bradykinin in humans in the
presence and absence of ACE inhibition. To do this, we measured the
wheal response to intradermal injection of bradykinin (0, 1, or 10 µg) in the presence or absence of intradermal administration of the
specific aminopeptidase P inhibitor apstatin (5 or 10 µg) and oral
administration of the ACE inhibitor quinapril (10 mg) in six healthy
subjects. Both bradykinin (ANOVA; F = 101.18, P < .001) and apstatin alone
(F = 7.01, P = .049) caused a
wheal of dose-dependent size. There was no significant interaction
between apstatin and bradykinin (F = 4.94, P = .175). Pretreatment with 10 mg of quinapril
significantly shifted the dose-response curve for bradykinin to the
left (effect of quinapril; F = 77.96, P < .001) and there was significant interaction
between quinapril and bradykinin (F = 7.82, P = .041). The effect of quinapril was significantly potentiated by coinjection of 10 µg of apstatin (effect
of apstatin; F = 21.60, P = .006), such that there was significant interactive effect of quinapril
and apstatin (F = 20.83, P = .006) on the wheal response to bradykinin. Collectively, these data
suggest that aminopeptidase P plays a minor role in the degradation of
bradykinin in human skin in the absence of ACE inhibition but
contributes significantly to the degradation of bradykinin in the
presence of ACE inhibition.
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