Renal inactivation of substance P in the rat

Abstract
The activity and distribution of substance P-catabolizing enzyme(s) were studied in the rat kidney. Kidney homogenates inactive substance P 5-20 times as fast as do homogenates of intestine, liver, lung, heart or brain. The catabolizing activity was highest in the cortex and decreased progressively down the papilla. Cortex of rat kidney was homogenized and fractions enriched in microsomal membrane, final supernatant, plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, brush border and intact glomeruli were prepared. The identity and homogeneity of the preparations were determined by assaying marker enzymes and by morphological examination. Substance P was catabolized most rapidly by the microsomal and plasma-membrane-enriched fractions, and least rapidly by endoplasmic reticulum or final supernatant fractions. Purified brush border of proximal tubules inactivated substance P more than 10 times as fast as isolated glomeruli. Our experiments show that substance P is catabolized at a rate that is similar to the rates of inactivation of bradykinin and angiotensin II. Further, the distribution of substance P-catabolizing activity in various kidney fractions is similar to the distribution of kininase and angiotensinase activities previously reported.