Renin is commonly known as a secretory glycoprotein, which is expressed, stored, and secreted in a regulated manner by the
kidney. The rat kidney exclusively expresses secretory renin. In this organ, renin regulates glomerular filtration rate, vascular
resistance, and sodium reabsorbtion. In the adult rat heart, secretory preprorenin is not expressed. Instead, an alternative
renin transcript is expressed that encodes for a previously unrecognized cytosolic renin. The expression of cytosolic but
not of secretory renin increases markedly after myocardial infarction, indicating a role specifically for cytosolic renin
in postischemic repair processes. In the adrenal gland, secretory renin is expressed and provides the basis for an intra-adrenal
angiotensin (ANG) II amplification system. This amplification system reduces the demand for circulating ANGII to stimulate
aldosterone production and thus minimizes any detrimental effects of circulating ANGII in other tissues. The adrenal gland
additionally expresses cytosolic renin, which is targeted to mitochondria. Adrenal cytosolic renin increases aldosterone production
plasma renin independently.
Keywords Tissue renin–angiotensin systems - Aldosterone - Renin transgenic rats - Renin sorting - Mitochondrial renin