The ACE2-Ang(1-7)-Mas axis acts as a putative ACE-Ang II-AT(1) receptor counter-regulatory axis within the renin-angiotensin system.
In the past few years, the classical concept of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) has experienced substantial conceptual changes. The identification of: the renin/prorenin receptor; the angiotensin-converting enzyme homologue, ACE2, as an angiotensin peptide-processing enzyme and a virus receptor for severe acute respiratory syndrome, the Mas as a receptor for angiotensin (1-7) Ang(1-7), and the possibility of signaling through ACE have contributed to switch our understanding of the RAS from the classical limited-proteolysis linear cascade to a cascade with multiple mediators, multiple receptors and multifunctional enzymes. With regard to Ang(1-7), the identification of ACE2 and of Mas as a receptor implicated in its actions contributed to decisively establish this heptapeptide as a biologically active member of the RAS cascade. In this review, we will focus on the recent findings related to the ACE2-Ang(1-7)-Mas axis and, in particular, on its putative role as an ACE-Ang II-AT(1) receptor counter-regulatory axis within the RAS.
Santos et al. (Sat,) reported a review. ACE2-Ang(1-7)-Mas axis was evaluated. The ACE2-Ang(1-7)-Mas axis acts as a putative ACE-Ang II-AT(1) receptor counter-regulatory axis within the renin-angiotensin system.
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