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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells, angiotensin II induced tyrosine phosphorylation of at least 9 proteins with molecular masses of 190, 117, 105, 82, 79, 77, 73, 45 and 40 kDa in time- and dose-dependent manners. Other vasoconstrictors such as [Arg]
vasopressin
,
5-hydroxytryptamine
and norepinephrine induced the tyrosine phosphorylation of the same set of proteins as angiotensin II. The tyrosine phosphorylation of these proteins was mimicked by the protein kinase C-activating phorbol ester, phorbol 12 myristate 13-acetate, and the Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin. These results demonstrate that the vasoconstrictors stimulate the tyrosine phosphorylation of several proteins in vascular smooth muscle cells and suggest that the tyrosine phosphorylation reactions are the events distal to the activation of protein kinase C and Ca2+ mobilization in the intracellular signalling pathways of the vasoconstrictors.
...
PMID:Vasoconstrictor-induced protein-tyrosine phosphorylation in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells. 206 81
Frequency-responses curves for nerve stimulation and dose-response curve for norepinephrine,
5-hydroxytryptamine
potassium chloride,
vasopressin
and acetylcholine (ACh) were determined in isolated, perfused mesenteric vascular beds from young (approximately 5 weeks) spontanelouly hypertensive (SHR) and Wistar Kyoto rats. Although mean systolic blood pressure (measured by tail cuff plethysmography) was slightly higher in the SHR, this difference was not significant. Slopes and maximum responses were increased significantly for nerve stimulation and all agonists. The basal perfusion pressure was also significantly elevated in the SHR. These differences are consistent with existing evidence that structural changes occur in blood vessels of SHR at an early stage and probably precede development of hypertension. Such structural changes could therefore contribute to development of the hypertension. Cocaine (1 microM) markedly increased responses to nerve stimulation and bolus injections of norepinephrine in preparations from SHR with little or no effect on such responses in Wistar Kyoto preparations, a result consistent with the known greater density of noradrenergic nerves in SHR vasculature. In the presence of cocaine, there was unmasked a selective super-sensitivity (significantly lower ED50) to norepinephrine in the SHR. Thus SHR mesenteric vessels may possess an alteration in adrenoreceptors or their coupling to other cellular mechanisms. Responses to ACh revealed no indication of a deficient endothelial mediated relaxation. An altered media:lumen ratio of small arteries, hypernoradrenergic innervation and supersensitivity to the transmitter may contribute to development of hypertension.
...
PMID:Mesenteric vascular responses of young spontaneously hypertensive rats. 207 89
1. Effects of E. coli endotoxin on vascular responsiveness to a variety of agents were compared with those of the calcium channel blocking drug nicardipine in pithed rats. 2. Infusion of endotoxin (250 micrograms kg-1 h-1) produced a fall in mean arterial blood pressure (8 mmHg). A similar fall (11 mmHg) was seen in rats receiving nicardipine (1.0 mg kg-1). 3. Endotoxin impaired responsiveness to
vasopressin
, phenylephrine and cirazoline, producing a shift to the right in the dose-response curves without any change in the maximum response. Responsiveness to
5-hydroxytryptamine
(
5-HT
) and to the alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonists clonidine and BHT 933, was also impaired with a marked reduction in their maximum responses. The dose-response curve to the pressor effects of endothelin was not significantly modified. 4. Nicardipine produced a similar pattern of impairment of responsiveness to these agents to that produced by endotoxin. However, nicardipine also shifted the pressor dose-response curve to endothelin to the right with no significant alteration in its maximum response. 5. The pressor responses to endothelin and to
5-HT
were, respectively, preceded and followed by dose-dependent depressor responses, which were markedly reduced by endotoxin and nicardipine. 6. The concomitant infusion of arginine vasopressin (0.64 iu kg-1 h-1) prevented endotoxin-induced hypotension and also prevented the impairment in responsiveness to cirazoline and to BHT 933. 7. The similarity of the pattern of impaired pressor responsiveness (except in relation to endothelin) and depressor responsiveness produced by endotoxin and nicardipine may be consistent with a common mechanism of action.
...
PMID:Endotoxin-induced impairment of vasopressor and vasodepressor responses in the pithed rat. 208 14
1. Administration of bradykinin caused dose-dependent vasoconstriction in rat isolated perfused mesenteric arteries precontracted with noradrenaline. 2. The vasoconstrictor response was not mediated by BK1-bradykinin receptors. 3. Inhibition of cyclo-oxygenase with indomethacin, aspirin or meclofenamate abolished the vasoconstrictor effect of bradykinin, showing that a member of the arachidonic acid cascade may be involved. 4. Inhibitors of thromboxane synthesis (imidazole and UK 38485) did not affect or only reduced the bradykinin-induced vasoconstriction. 5. The endoperoxide H2/thromboxane A2 receptor antagonist SQ 29548 significantly reduced the vasoconstrictor effect of bradykinin, but did not affect the vasoconstrictor response to noradrenaline, adrenaline,
vasopressin
,
5-hydroxytryptamine
or prostaglandins. 6. The eicosanoid(s) that mediate bradykinin-induced vasoconstriction appear to be synthesized outside the arterial endothelium. 7. The data suggest that the vasoconstrictor effect of bradykinin in the rat isolated mesenteric artery is mediated by vasoconstrictor arachidonic acid metabolites including the cyclic endoperoxides and/or the thromboxanes.
...
PMID:Bradykinin-induced vasoconstriction of rat mesenteric arteries precontracted with noradrenaline. 214 65
1. An in vitro preparation of the rabbit knee joint, perfused with oxygenated Locke solution, was used to investigate the presence of purinoceptors and the role of endothelium within articular blood vessels. 2. The basal tone of the blood vessels was not affected by adenosine or acetylcholine. Adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) injection produced vasoconstriction which was unaffected by removal of the endothelial layer, but diminished by alpha, beta methylene ATP, a compound which desensitizes P2-purinoceptors. 3. When knee joint blood vessel tone was raised by perfusion with
vasopressin
(10(-8) M) or
5-hydroxytryptamine
(10(-5) M), acetylcholine, ATP and adenosine were all found to induce concentration-dependent relaxation of these vessels. ATP was found to have a dual effect of transient constriction followed by longer-lasting dilatation. 4. 3-Methylxanthine, a P1-purinoceptor antagonist significantly reduced the relaxation response to adenosine but had no effect on the vasodilator effect of ATP. 5. Removal of the endothelial layer virtually abolished the vasodilator effects of acetylcholine and ATP but not adenosine. 6. These results demonstrate that articular blood vessels supplying the rabbit knee contain P1-purinoceptors located on the vascular smooth muscle which mediate vasodilatation. P2-purinoceptors mediating a constrictor effect are also present on this smooth muscle. It is likely that the vasodilator effect of ATP is mediated via P2-purinoceptors located on the endothelial layer.
...
PMID:The role of the endothelium in mediating the actions of ATP, adenosine and acetylcholine on flow through blood vessels in the rabbit knee joint. 232 2
1. A new isolated perfused preparation is described that allows a direct comparison to be made of the responses of the perfused arterial and retrogradely perfused venous circulations of the rat superior mesenteric vascular bed. 2. In experiments comparing the responses of the intact arterially perfused mesentery and small intestine to those of the same preparation following removal of the intestine and division of the circulations, the increases in perfusion pressure produced by
arginine-vasopressin
(30 pmol) and noradrenaline (1 nmol) were retained by the arterial circulation and those induced by angiotensin II (30 pmol) by the venous circulation. Endothelin-1 (30 pmol) constricted both portions of the vasculature but the prolonged nature of its response was associated with only the venous vessels. 3. In the simultaneously perfused arterial and venous preparation arginine vasopressin (3-100 pmol) was a selective constrictor of the arterial circulation and angiotensin II (3-100 pmol) of the venous circulation. In addition, noradrenaline (0.3-10 nmol),
5-hydroxytryptamine
(0.3-10 nmol) and KCl (1-60 micromol) were more active as constrictors of the arterial than the venous vessels, and U46619 (10-300 pmol) a more active constrictor of the venous than the arterial vessels. Endothelin-1 (3-100 pmol) constricted both the arterial and venous portions of the vasculature but was significantly longer acting as a venoconstrictor than an arterioconstrictor. 4. Angiotensin I (300 pmol) caused constrictions of the venous circulation which were dependent upon the presence of angiotensin converting enzyme for captopril (10 microM) abolished constrictions caused by angiotensin I but not by angiotensin II. 5. In preparations preconstricted by U46619 (0.3-3 microM), acetylcholine (0.01-100 nmol), bradykinin (0.001-nmol), sodium nitroprusside (0.01-lOnmol) or isoprenaline (1-l00pmol) produced dose-related dilatations of both the arterial and the venous vasculatures, whereas adenosine diphosphate (ADP, 0.01-lOOnmol) caused dose-dependent dilatations of the arterial circulation but principally constrictions of the venous circulation. The dilatations caused by acetylcholine and bradykinin in both portions of the circulation, and by ADP in the arterial circulation, were endothelium-dependent as they were inhibited by gossypol (3 microM), whereas dilatations to sodium nitroprusside were not. 6. This preparation allows the responses of the arteries and veins of a single perfused mesenteric bed to be compared. In addition, with this preparation it is possible to demonstrate that veins, as well as arteries, show significant endothelium-dependent relaxations. It is concluded that the venous portion of the vasculature is significantly involved in the responses of the intact circulation.
...
PMID:Simultaneous perfusion of rat isolated superior mesenteric arterial and venous beds: comparison of their vasoconstrictor and vasodilator responses to agonists. 232 5
A bland procedure, conducted in ice, is described for the extraction with HCl of smooth-muscle-contracting substances from plexus-containing ileal longitudinal muscle (l.m.) sheets obtained mainly from rabbits and some guinea-pigs. The spasmogenic activity in rabbit extracts was distinguished from acetylcholine, histamine and
5-hydroxytryptamine
by antagonists; and from prostaglandins, by its insolubility in ether at acid pH and by pretreatment of the animals with indomethacin. The fact that it contracts the separated l.m. of the guinea-pig ileum, whether plexus-containing or plexus-free, and in atropine distinguishes it also from methionine-enkephalin, somatostatin, 13-norleucine motilin, bombesin, and cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK8). This activity was partially purified, first by several partitions with ether at pH 1.4-2.2 and then by treatment at pH 4.5-5 with lead acetate. The virtual absence of ATP was confirmed by the firefly bioluminescence technique. The guinea-pig-ileum-contracting component in the partially purified extracts was destroyed by pepsin, chymotrypsin and DPCC-treated trypsin, indicating its peptide nature and distinguishing it from oxytocin,
vasopressin
, bradykinin, etc. In parallel assays the partially purified rabbit extracts were considerably more active than Substance P on jird or rat ascending colons than on the guinea-pig l.m., suggesting the presence of a second spasmogenic component in the extracts. In guinea-pig extracts the partially purified activity was 8-16 times greater when plexus-containing than when plexus-free, pointing to Auerbach's plexus as the source of the activity.
...
PMID:Extraction and partial purification of spasmogenic substances in Auerbach's plexus. 242 21
The coexistence of galanin (GAL)-like immunoreactivity (LI) with markers for catecholamines,
5-hydroxytryptamine
(
5-HT
), GABA, or some neuropeptides was mapped in the rat CNS by using adjacent sections, as well as by elution-restaining and double-labeling immunocytochemistry. Many instances of coexistence were observed, but there were also numerous GAL-positive cell body populations displaying distributions similar to those of these markers but without apparent coexistence. In the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus GAL-LI was found in a large proportion of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive cell bodies (A12 cells), both in the dorsomedial and ventrolateral subdivisions, with a higher number in the latter. GAL-LI coexisted in glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)-positive somata in the posterior aspects of the arcuate nucleus and at all rostrocaudal levels in fibers in the external layer of the median eminence. In the anterior hypothalamus, a large population of the cells of the parvocellular and magnocellular paraventricular nuclei contained both GAL-LI and
vasopressin
-LI. Moreover, somata containing both GAD- and GAL-LI were seen lateral to the mammillary recess in the tuberal and caudal magnocellular nuclei. Some of the neurons of the caudal group were shown to project to the occipital cortex using combined retrograde tracing and immunofluorescence. With regard to mesencephalic and medullary catecholamine neurons, GAL-LI coexisted in a large proportion of the noradrenergic locus coeruleus somata (A6 cell group) and in the A4 group dorsolateral to the fourth ventricle, as well as in the caudal parts of the A2 group in the dorsal vagal complex. However, in more rostral parts of the latter, especially in the medial subdivision of the solitary tract nucleus, a very large population of GAL-IR small cell bodies was seen intermingling with catecholamine neurons, but they did not contain TH-LI. Furthermore, GAL-IR cell bodies coextensive with, but not coexisting in, TH-IR somata were seen in the C1 (epinephrine) horea in the ventrolateral medulla at the level of area postrema and in the most rostral aspects of the C1 group. Finally,
5-HT
-positive cell bodies of the mesencephalic and medullary raphe nuclei and a subpopulation of coarse
5-HT
nerve fibers in the hippocampus co-contained GAL-LI. The present results demonstrate that a GAL-like peptide is present in many systems containing other neuroactive compounds, including dopamine, norepinephrine,
5-HT
, GABA, and
vasopressin
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Coexistence of galanin-like immunoreactivity with catecholamines, 5-hydroxytryptamine, GABA and neuropeptides in the rat CNS. 243 3
Experiments were designed to determine the role of the endothelial cells and the metabolism of arachidonic acid in anoxic contractions of isolated canine basilar arteries. Rings, with and without endothelium, of these arteries were suspended for isometric tension recording; anoxia was induced by switching the mixture gassing the organ chamber from 95% O2-5% CO2 to 95% N2-5% CO2. In rings with endothelium, anoxia evoked increases in tension under basal conditions and during contractions to
5-hydroxytryptamine
, uridine triphosphate, prostaglandin F2 alpha, and high K+. Under control conditions, these anoxic contractions were not prevented by alpha-adrenergic and serotonergic antagonists, by apyrase, or by inhibitors of cyclooxygenase. Anoxia prevented endothelium-dependent relaxations evoked by
vasopressin
and thrombin. In rings without endothelium, anoxia caused increases in tension during contractions evoked by various agonists, and in unstimulated preparations after inhibition of cyclooxygenase. Anoxic contractions were abolished by calcium entry blockers. These observations suggest that anoxic contractions of isolated canine basilar artery can be explained by the release of endothelium-derived contracting factor(s) and the accelerated entry of calcium in the smooth muscle cells, which possibly results from a diversion of arachidonic acid from the cyclooxygenase to the lipoxygenase pathway.
...
PMID:Anoxic contractions in isolated canine cerebral arteries: contribution of endothelium-derived factors, metabolites of arachidonic acid, and calcium entry. 243 36
mRNAs for isozymes of phospholipase C (PLC) were localized in rat brain by in situ hybridization with oligonucleotide probes for PLC isozymes I, II, and III of Rhee's group [Suh, P.-G., Ryu, S. H., Moon, K. H., Suh, H. W. & Rhee, S. G. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 5419-5423 and (1988) Cell 54, 161-169], and isozyme I of Bennett and Crooke [Bennett, C. F., Balcarek, J. M., Varrichio, A. & Crooke, S. T. (1988) Nature (London) 334, 268-270], which we designate PLC-A. The isozymes displayed different localizations. PLC-A mRNA was highest in the mitral cell layer of the olfactory bulb, choroid plexus, hippocampus and dentate gyrus, magnocellular hypothalamic nuclei, rostral raphe nuclei, and cerebellar Purkinje cells. PLC-I was highest in the internal granular cell layer of the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, caudate, nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract, reticular nucleus of thalamus, hippocampus and dentate gyrus, and granule cell layer of the cerebellum. PLC-II had a more widespread distribution, with relatively high levels in the internal granular layer of the olfactory bulb, hippocampus and dentate gyrus, and cerebellar Purkinje and granule cells. PLC-III label was low throughout the brain. These distributions suggest selective coupling of individual PLC isozymes with particular postsynaptic receptors. PLC-A may be preferentially associated with
5-hydroxytryptamine
1C receptors,
vasopressin
V1 receptors, and a subtype of glutamate receptors. PLC-I may be linked to muscarinic m1 and m3 receptors as well as other receptors. The distribution of PLC-II mRNA resembles that of src protooncogene, with which it displays sequence homology.
...
PMID:Brain phospholipase C isozymes: differential mRNA localizations by in situ hybridization. 246 62
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