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Query: UNIPROT:P00790 (
PGA
)
2,475
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prostaglandins (PG) A1, B1, E2, F2 alpha and plasma renin activity (PRA) were measured by radioimmunoassay in 8 patients with unilateral artery stenosis, 7 hypertensive patients with unilateral renal atrophy without stenosis ans 20 controls. The measurement of the PG and PRA in the hypertensive group was performed in the infra-renal inferior vena cava and in the two renal veins. PRA and PGA1 were significantly raised in the renovascular hypertensive patients but no significant change was observed in the group with unilateral renal atrophy. On the other hand, the PGE2 and PGF2 alpha were raised in both groups, especially in the renal veins on the stenosed or atrophic side. There was a positive significant correlation between PRA and PGA1 and PGB, but none with PGE2 or PGF2 alpha. This study suggests that the increase in PGA1 and PGE2 represents a secondary hypertensive mechanism which is diuretic and natiuretic. The increase of PGF2 alpha represents a direct mechanism of
hypertension
. Simultaneous measurement of the vasopressor (PRA and PGF2 alpha) and vasodepressor (
PGA
and PGE) systems may give a better diagnostic and prognostic approach to renovascular
hypertension
.
...
PMID:[Prostaglandins in renovascular arterial hypertension]. 11 9
In addition to its well known prohypertensive role in various states of experimental and human
hypertension
, the kidney has also been shown to exert an antihypertensive "endocrine" function. According to this hypothesis, certain forms of experimental and human
hypertension
might not solely be the result of an excess in the activity of such renal pressor systems as the renin-angiotensin system and the sympathetic nervous system, but might also result from an absolute or relative deficiency of intra-renal vasodilator antihypertensive factors which might allow pressor systems to act unopposed to produce peripheral arteriolar vasoconstriction and sustained
hypertension
. At least four factors have been characterized in the kidney of various animal species and man which might be responsible for such an antihypertensive function. These are (1) the renomedullary prostaglandins (PGs), (2) the renomedullary antihypertensive neutral lipid, (3) antirenin phospholipid and (4) the renal kinins. This review is restricted to an examination of the possibility that the vasodepressor renomedullary prostaglandins (
PGA
and/or PGE) may, at least in part, mediate the so-called antihypertensive function of the kidney and participate in the regulation of renal blood flow and natriuresis by physiologic antagonism of various renal vasoconstrictor stimuli such as the renal renin-angiotensin and the sympathetic nervous systems.
...
PMID:Renal prostaglandins and the regulation of blood pressure and sodium and water homeostasis. 79 89
The renal prostaglandins PGS2 and PGE2 possess potent antihypertensive and vasodepressor activity. The mechanism of blood pressure lowering effect is through peripheral arteriolar dilation with a fall in total peripheral resistance.
PGA
unlike PGE escape degradation by the lung and thus could circulate as antihypertensive hormones. Since plasma
PGA
levels rise in humans on a low sodium intake, it has been postulated that the beneficial effects of a low sodium diet in some hypertensives may be the result of an increase in peripheral vasodilating
PGA
. Support that plasma
PGA
may be a regulator of systemic blood pressure is also derived from the fact a
PGA
-secreting renal tumor was associated with a fall in blood pressure and a rise in plasma
PGA
in a previously hypertensive woman. The removal of the tumor resulted in a return of blood pressure to elevated levels and a concomitant fall in
PGA
. Recently, a number of human patients with essential hypertension have been infused with PGA1 and PGA2. It was observed that there was an initial increase in renal blood flow, sodium and water excretion which was associated with no change in the elevated blood pressure. When blood pressure ultimately fell, there was a return of renal blood flow, sodium and water excretion to preinfusion levels. It would appear that
PGA
compounds act as 'ideal' antihypertensive agents since they favorably effect renal resistance, sodium and water homeostasis, plasma volume, total peripheral resistance, blood pressure and indirectly cardiac output through baroreceptor stimulation, all factors known to be important in etiology in human
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Renal prostaglandins. 110 Oct 92
Normal plasma contains inactive renin, which becomes active when plasma is dialyzed to pH 3.3 and to pH 7.5, or treated with pepsin or trypsin. Under optimal conditions, each of these procedures activated the same quantity of renin, which was not further increased by repeating or combining two procedures, thus suggesting that the same pool of inactive renin was activated by each procedure. When plasma was fractionated by gel filtration, dialysis activated very little renin in eluates. Trypsin activated renin, but under some conditions also destroyed renin.
Pepsin
fully activated the inactive renin in eluates without evidence of destruction of renin. The pepsin-activated renin of normal plasma eluted from Sephadex G-100 in a peak of apparent molecular weight (MW) 58,000 and from Sephacryl S-200 with apparent MW 53,000, like big renin in plasma of patients with diabetic nephropathy. Inactive renin was usually increased in amount in plasma of sodium-depleted normal men, but the elution volume did not change with sodium intake. When renin was fully activated in plasma incubated with pepsin or trypsin, the apparent MW of the main peak of big renin did not change appreciably. Inactive renin in plasma was usually increased after sodium depletion, but the elution volume did not change. Active renin of normal plasma had an apparent MW near 41,000 on both gels. Thus, we conclude that big renin is present in normal plasma in amounts at least equal to and usually greater than active renin (the ratio depending on sodium intake) and that pepsin activation readily demonstrates big renin in eluates from gel filtration.
Hypertension
PMID:Inactive renin of high molecular weight (big renin) in normal human plasma. Activation by pepsin, trypsin, or dialysis to pH 3.3 and 7.5. 678 Apr 60
Arterial
hypertension
-related renal damage is an increasingly common problem recently, because approximately 25% of patients currently treated with dialysis were hypertensive before renal replacement therapy was started.
Hypertension
is also known as a metabolic disease, while carbohydrate, purine and lipid disturbances are the features of this syndrome. On the other hand, the progression of renal disease depends on the extent of tubulointerstitial injury. For this reason, we undertook a study to evaluate the relationship between excretion of the markers of tubular damage (NAG) and some parameters of carbohydrate, purine and lipid metabolism in untreated essential hypertension. Both healthy volunteers (n = 15) aged 32. 6+/-7.8 and essential hypertensives (n = 25) aged 37.24+/-11.39 underwent the same tests. These tests were performed at 2-day intervals: intravenous glucose tolerance test with 0.5 g/kg b.w. as 40% glucose solution and oral fructose load test with 1.0 g/kg b.w. Area under glucose curve (GA) and serum uric acid post-fructose (PUAA) were calculated. Fasting: insulin, total cholesterol and LDL, triglycerides, free fatty acids (FFA) and urine excretion of NAG, albumin were determined. Glomerular filtration rate was estimated as creatinine clearance. Hypertensives showed statistically higher BMI (p<0.007), NAG (p<0.02), total cholesterol (p<0.01), LDL (p<0.007), FFA (p<0.007), insulin (p<0.01),
PGA
(p<0.01) and PUAA (p<0.03). NAG excretion correlated positively with WHR (r = 0.40), MAP (r = 0.47) and PUAA (r = 0.47) in hypertensives only. We presume that tubular injury at an early stage of renal damage in patients with essential hypertension could be a part of metabolic syndrome X.
...
PMID:Hypertensive nephropathy - an increasing clinical problem. 1020 62
Dioscorin, the tuber storage protein of yam (Dioscorea alata cv. Tainong No. 1), was purified to homogeneity by DE-52 ion-exchange chromatography. This purified dioscorin was shown by spectrophotometric methods to inhibit angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) in a dose-dependent manner (12.5-750 microg, respectively, 20.83-62.5% inhibitions) using N-[3-(2-furyl)acryloyl]-Phe-Gly-Gly (FAPGG) as substrates. The 50% inhibition (IC(50)) of ACE activity was 6.404 microM dioscorin (250 microg corresponding to 7.81 nmol) compared to that of 0.00781 microM (0.0095 nmol) for captopril. The commercial bovine serum albumin and casein (bovine milk) showed less ACE inhibitory activity. The use of qualitative TLC also showed dioscorin as ACE inhibitors. Dioscorin showed mixed noncompetitive inhibitions against ACE; when 31.25 microg of dioscorin (0.8 microM) was added, the apparent inhibition constant (K(i)) was 2.738 microM.
Pepsin
was used for dioscorin hydrolysis at 37 degrees C for different times. It was found that the ACE inhibitory activity was increased from 51.32% to about 75% during 32 h hydrolysis. The smaller peptides were increased with increasing pepsin hydrolytic times. Dioscorin and its hydrolysates might be a potential for
hypertension
control when people consume yam tuber.
...
PMID:Both dioscorin, the tuber storage protein of yam (Dioscorea alata cv. Tainong No. 1), and its peptic hydrolysates exhibited angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitory activities. 1235 88
Leaf protein containing approximately 50% rubisco (ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) was obtained from fresh spinach leaf with the use of a simple extraction method.
Pepsin
and pepsin-pancreatin digests of spinach leaf protein have potent angiotensin-I converting enzyme inhibitory properties with IC(50) values of 56 and 120 microg/mL, respectively. Both digests of leaf protein have antihypertensive effects after oral administration to spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) with minimum effective doses of 0.25 and 0.5 g/kg, respectively. The maximum antihypertensive effect for the pepsin digest was observed 4 h after oral administration, while for the pepsin-pancreatin digest, the maximum effect was observed 2 h after oral administration. Undigested spinach leaf protein did not exert any significant antihypertensive effect after oral administration to SHR at doses of 0.5 and 1 g/kg. Obtained results show that the pepsin digest of leaf protein may be useful in treatment of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Antihypertensive properties of spinach leaf protein digests. 1508 Jun 24
Pregnancy in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is considered a high-risk pregnancy. It is complicated by preeclampsia, premature labour and miscarriage more frequently than in the general population. Improved prognosis depends on low disease activity during conception and on appropriate medical care (SLE activity monitoring, selection of therapy safe for the mother and the developing foetus, advances in neonatology). Because symptoms of physiological pregnancy and SLE exacerbation are similar, their correct interpretation is essential for skin lesions, arthralgias, arterial
hypertension
or results of laboratory tests: proteinuria, thrombocytopenia or leucopenia observed in the patient. In order to standardise the assessment of SLE activity during pregnancy, scores of this activity are used. In the past, scores validated on non-pregnant populations (including male patients) were used: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI), Systemic Lupus Activity Measure (SLAM), European Consensus Lupus Activity Measurment (ECLAM). Only recently have SLE activity scores been introduced that are specific for pregnant women: Lupus Activity Index In Pregnancy (LAI-P), Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Pregnancy Disease Activity Index (SLEPDAI), modified--Systemic Lupus Activity Measure (m-SLAM) and a visual three-grade score modified--Physician Global Assessment (m-PGA). So far, only scores LAI-P and m-
PGA
have been validated. According to the LAI-P score, clinical data are divided into 4 groups. Group 1 includes mild clinical symptoms, group 2--symptoms of involvement of internal organs, group 3 pertains to modifications of treatment and group 4 to laboratory parameters. Point values are ascribed to individual parameters depending on their intensity.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of systemic lupus erythematosus activity during pregnancy]. 1796 97
Pepsin
-digested soy protein hydrolysate has been reported to be responsible for many of the physiological benefits associated with soy protein consumption. In the present study, we investigated the effects of soy protein hydrolysate with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory potential on the blood pressure and cardiovascular remodeling in rats with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride (L-NAME)-induced
hypertension
. Rats were fed a diet containing L-NAME (50 mg/kg body weight) with or without soy protein hydrolysate (1%, 3% or 5%) for 6 weeks. We found that ingestion of soy protein hydrolysate retarded the development of
hypertension
during the 6-week experimental period without affecting the amount of food intake. Although there was no difference in plasma ACE activity or tissue nitric oxide levels, ACE activity in the heart of rats consuming soy protein hydrolysate was significantly lower than that of the control group. Moreover, cardiac malonaldehyde and tumor necrosis factor-alpha concentrations were also lower in the soy protein hydrolysate group. No difference in plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 level was found in plasma or cardiovascular tissue. In the histopathological analysis, we also found that soy protein hydrolysate ameliorated inflammation and left ventricle hypertrophy in the heart. These findings suggest that soy protein hydrolysate might not only improve the balance between circulating nitric oxide and renin-angiotensin system but also show beneficial effects on cardiovascular tissue through its ACE inhibitory activity.
...
PMID:Soy protein hydrolysate ameliorates cardiovascular remodeling in rats with L-NAME-induced hypertension. 1847 99
Pepsin
-digested soy protein hydrolysate (SPH) has been reported to be responsible for many of the physiological benefits associated with soy protein consumption. In the present study, we investigated the effects of SPH with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory potential on blood pressure and renal injuries in rats with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride (L-NAME)-induced
hypertension
. Rats were fed a diet containing L-NAME (50 mg/kg body weight) with or without SPH (at 1%, 3%, or 5%) for 6 weeks. We found that ingestion of SPH ameliorated the development of
hypertension
during the 6-week experimental period. SPH was also found to ameliorate renal function by decreasing urinary protein excretion and elevating the creatinine clearance rate. The levels of kidney ACE activity, malonaldehyde, tumor necrosis factor-a and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and the expression of CYP4A decreased in the 5% SPH group. Consumption of 5% SPH also ameliorated renal damage according to the histopathological analysis. These findings suggest that SPH might ameliorate the elevation of blood pressure and show renoprotective effects in nitric oxide (NO)-deficient rats, and one possible mechanism might be mediation via its ACE inhibitory activity.
...
PMID:Renoprotective effects of soy protein hydrolysates in N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride-induced hypertensive rats. 1895 19
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