P Corvol. Renin inhibition by peptides and pseudo-peptides. Nephrologie. 1989;10(2):65-71.
The only known action of renin is the hydrolysis of angiotensinogen into angiotensin I. Renin is synthesized as an inactive precursor, preprorenin. The processing of prorenin into active renin occurs after the clivage of a profragment, just after a dibasic pair of amino-acids. Renin, like other aspartyl proteases, hydrolyses its substrate in its active center where two aspartyl residues are involved in the catalytic mechanism. The strong species specificity of renin lies in its interaction with its substrate through subsites which can be modelized by computer graphics. There is much promise in the inhibition of the renin angiotensin system at the level of the renin-angiotensinogen reaction.
1μg (R: reducing condition, N: non-reducing condition).