Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have suggested that the renal tubular signal for renin release is related to alterations of sodium chloride cotransport in the TALH. Renin release is inhibited by increased sodium chloride transport and stimulated by interrupted sodium chloride transport. Because of the different affinities of the carriers for sodium and chloride, chloride rather than sodium is rate limiting for this cotransport process. Consequently, renin release is related to alterations of chloride delivery rather than sodium delivery to the TALH. The reduction of PRA by selective chloride loading and by short-term infusion of chloride salts is related to increased chloride delivery to the loop and hence increased chloride transport. Alternatively, chlorpropamide and antidiuretic hormone may inhibit renin release by increasing chloride delivery to the loop. Stimulation of renin release may likewise be related either to decreased chloride delivery and hence decreased transport in the loop (hypochloremia related to selective chloride deprivation) or to an intrinsic alteration in the transporting capacity of the loop (loop diuretics, potassium depletion, glucocorticoid deficiency, Bartter's syndrome). The intermediate steps between alterations of sodium chloride transport in the TALH and renin release remain to be defined.
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PMID:Renal tubular chloride and renin release. 331 41

This paper describes the inhibitory effect of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) on antidiuretic hormone (ADH)-stimulated net Cl- absorption and spontaneous transepithelial voltage (Ve) in single medullary thick ascending limbs of Henle (TALH, thick ascending limb; mTALH, medullary segment; cTALH, cortical segment) obtained from mouse kidney. The experimental data indicate that PGE2 reduced the ADH-dependent values of net Cl- absorption (JnetCl, eq cm-2 s-1) and Ve (mV) in a dose-dependent manner; that increasing concentrations of peritubular ADH reversed the PGE2-mediated reductions in the ADH-dependent moiety of Ve in the mouse mTALH; that PGE2 had no effect on cyclic AMP-stimulated increments in Ve in the mouse mTALH; and that PGE2 had no effect on Ve in the cTALH, where Ve is unaffected either by ADH or by cyclic AMP. These effects might be obtained because of a direct competition between ADH and PGE2 for receptor binding on basolateral membranes. Alternatively, PGE2 might have reduced the affinities between ADH-receptor units and a component(s) of the series of processes leading to adenyl cyclase activation. The latter argument requires that basolateral membranes of the mouse mTALH exhibit receptor reserve, i.e., at the minimum concentration of ADH required to enhance Ve and JnetCl maximally, a fraction of basolateral membrane ADH receptors were unoccupied. According to this view, increasing peritubular ADH concentrations might reverse the PGE2-mediated reduction in ADH-dependent salt transport by increasing the number of basolateral membrane receptors occupied by ADH.
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PMID:Interactions among prostaglandin E2, antidiuretic hormone, and cyclic adenosine monophosphate in modulating Cl- absorption in single mouse medullary thick ascending limbs of Henle. 630 52

We describe a simple method for obtaining functionally and morphologically intact primary cultures of cells from the medullary thick ascending limb of rabbit kidneys. After digesting dissected fragments of the inner stripe of the outer medulla with collagenase, a suspension of tubule fragments is obtained, the vast majority of which are medullary thick ascending limb (MTAL) segments. These are identified individually by their morphological appearance and large amounts are collected with a micropipette mounted on a micromanipulator. This ensures maximal homogeneity of the starting material. Monolayers of cells grow out of these MTAL segments after seeding them onto collagen-coated, permeable filter supports. During the week following confluence, the cultures exhibit an apical side-positive transepithelial potential difference. Electron microscopic examination shows a monolayer of polarised cells with characteristics of distal tubular cells. The primary cultures express Tamm-Horsfall protein at their apical surface. Additional evidence for their differentiation and polarisation is the net ammonium influx, which occurs at very high rates across the apical membrane and is much slower across the basolateral membrane, as judged by measurements of intracellular pH. Adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) production is stimulated by arginine-vasopressin, calcitonin or isoproterenol (all 1 micromol/l). Intracellular calcium signalling is observed after stimulation with 1 micromol/l adenosine, adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) and bradykinin. In addition, we compared these characteristics with those of TALH-SVE cell monolayers, an established immortalised cell line of the same origin.
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PMID:A simple method for obtaining functionally and morphologically intact primary cultures of the medullary thick ascending limb of Henle's loop (MTAL) from rabbit kidneys. 1095 49