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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of
vasopressin
on the short-term control of fatty acid metabolism were studied in isolated rat hepatocytes. Vasopressin increased the oxidation of oleate to
CO2
and decreased the formation of ketones in hepatocytes from Wistar rats, but not from Brattleboro rats. Incubation with
vasopressin
for 30 min increased the conversion of oleate into triacylglycerol by 17% and 32% in hepatocytes from Wistar and Brattleboro rats respectively. The corresponding increases for the phospholipid fraction were 19% and 42%. When Wistar-rat hepatocytes were incubated with corticosterone for 6 h there was a 19% increase in triacylglycerol synthesis, and a 52% increase if
vasopressin
was added 30 min before the end of the incubation. Glycerol phosphate acyltransferase activity was not significantly increased by
vasopressin
. Incubation for 5-60 min with
vasopressin
increased the Vmax. of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase by 48% and 32% respectively in hepatocytes from Wistar and Brattleboro rats. These increases were antagonized if EGTA was added to the medium used for incubating the hepatocytes. The replacement of
vasopressin
by 5 microM-ionophore A23187 produced a significant increase of 13% in the phosphohydrolase activity. It is therefore likely that the effects of
vasopressin
on the phosphohydrolase are mediated by Ca2+. These results are discussed in relation to the possible function of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase in controlling the turnover of phosphoinositides, the synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine and triacylglycerol, and the secretion of very-low-density lipoproteins.
...
PMID:Effects of vasopressin and corticosterone on fatty acid metabolism and on the activities of glycerol phosphate acyltransferase and phosphatidate phosphohydrolase in rat hepatocytes. 632 Aug 8
Four Japanese male subjects were studied during 3 days at 1 ATA, 3 days of compression to 31 ATA (1000 fsw), 14 days at 31 ATA, 12 days of decompression, and 3 days of postdive control at 1 ATA. The chamber was maintained at thermoneutral temperatures. During the 31-ATA exposure, urine flow increased about 500 ml/day (P less than 0.05) accompanied by an approximate 500-ml/day increase in osmotic clearance (Cosm) (P less than 0.05). Both urine flow and Cosm increases were primarily attributable to an increase in the overnight flow rates (P less than 0.01). The negative free water (-
CH2O
)/Cosm decreased during exposure to 31 ATA, indicating that a reduction in tubular water reabsorption may also contribute to the diuresis. Urine flow, Cosm, and -
CH2O
/Cosm all returned to predive values during decompression to 1 ATA. The urinary excretion rate of aldosterone increased from 2.7 +/- 0.3 micrograms/day at 1 ATA to 4.3 +/- 0.0 micrograms/day (P less than 0.01) at 31 ATA, remaining at about 3.8 micrograms/day until decompression. Urinary
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) decreased from 50 +/- 7 to 33 +/- 3 mU/day (P less than 0.01) upon compression to 31 ATA and continued to decrease throughout the decompression phase. Plasma renin activity was increased by twofold (P less than 0.01) and plasma aldosterone by about 37% (NS) during exposure to 31 ATA. It is concluded that the reduction in
ADH
does not contribute significantly to the hyperbaric diuresis, and that the increased activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone is a result of other postulated mechanisms resulting in an increased Cosm.
...
PMID:Responses of salt- and water-regulating hormones during a saturation dive to 31 ATA (SEADRAGON IV). 637 32
A method is described for measuring rates of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation in hepatocytes treated with the polyene antibiotic, filipin, to render the plasma membrane permeable to substrates. With this approach it was possible to demonstrate that treatment of cells with glucagon or catecholamines results in a stimulation of mitochondrial
CO2
fixation measured in situ comparable with that observed in the isolated mitochondria, in terms of time of onset of the response, hormone selectivity and sensitivity. In addition, angiotensin II and
vasopressin
were shown to enhance the activity of pyruvate carboxylase in both the intact mitochondria and filipin-treated cells, thus strengthening the postulate that this site is a major locus of hormone action in the control of gluconeogenesis. Addition of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid, to inhibit gluconeogenesis at the level of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, had no significant effect on the stimulation of pyruvate carboxylation by adrenaline, suggesting that the effect of the hormone at this site is independent of changes in activity of other enzymes further on in the pathway. The data presented preclude the possibility that acute effects of hormones on mitochondrial metabolism are solely artifacts of the preparation procedure.
...
PMID:Hormonal stimulation of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation in filipin-treated hepatocytes. 641 Oct 66
To test the hypothesis that
antidiuretic hormone
- (ADH) dependent water permeability is associated with changes in apical membrane area, hormone-dependent water flow and capacitance changes were measured in the toad urinary bladder under a number of different conditions. Dose-response relationships for water flow (Jv) and capacitance increases (delta C) were similar from 1 to 20 mU/ml ADH. At higher concentrations, Jv reached a plateau, while delta C decreased. The decrease in delta C was prevented by elimination of the osmotic gradient across the tissue. Serosal hydrazine (10 mM) increased Jv sevenfold and delta C threefold in the presence of 1 mU/ml ADH. Mucosal NH4Cl, at constant mucosal pH, increased Jv by 50-100%, but did not significantly change delta C. In the absence of an osmotic gradient, mucosal NH+4 increased delta C by 50%. NH4Cl had no effect on hydroosmotic response to 8-bromo-adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP). Mucosal
CO2
(9%) decreased Jv by greater than 90%, and delta C by 60% with 20 mU/ml ADH. Mucosal
CO2
also inhibited the hydroosmotic response to 8-bromo-cAMP. Removal of serosal Na diminished cAMP-dependent Jv and delta C. The results confirmed the close relationship between ADH-dependent water permeability and membrane capacitance. They indicate, however, that under some circumstances membrane may be retrieved from the apical surface without affecting water permeability.
...
PMID:Modulation of antidiuretic hormone-dependent capacitance and water flow in toad urinary bladder. 642 10
Vasopressin decreases blood flow as well as secretory flow in the pancreas. The question raised was whether the blood flow decrease is the determinant of the decrease in secretion or quite the reverse. In pentobarbital anesthetized dogs, secretory flow was first increased to a steady level by infusion of secretin. At this steady state, O2 consumption and O2 extraction were increased, while blood flow remained at the control level, indicating an increase in the area available for exchange i.e. an increase in capillary density. At increasing doses of
vasopressin
, secretory flow decreased, arterial flow decreased, and O2 extraction increased, while O2 consumption decreased and venous-arterial
CO2
concentration difference was not changed. At the same time
CO2
transport decreased,
CO2
concentration in the secretion was unchanged and
CO2
output in the secretion was decreased. The decrease in blood flow was always seen about 25 s before the decrease in secretory flow, strongly suggesting that the decrease in blood flow induced the decrease in secretory flow. A higher dose of
vasopressin
was required to decrease the O2 consumption (i.e. this effect was less sensitive) than to increase O2 extraction. The decrease in secretory flow and the decrease in blood flow showed an intermediate sensitivity. So O2 consumption seems to be preserved at a high level by the increase in O2 extraction. It is concluded that the
vasopressin
-induced decrease in blood flow is the determinant of the decrease in secretory flow. This phenomenon is discussed in terms of the model for metabolic control of tissue oxygenation.
...
PMID:A vasopressin-induced decrease in pancreatic blood flow and in pancreatic exocrine secretion in the anesthetized dog. 642 52
Plasma
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) and urinary prostaglandin E2 excretion (UPGE2V) were measured in basal conditions, after water restriction, and after water-loading in 10 normal subjects (free water clearance after the water load,
CH2O
, 9.6 +/- 0.8 ml/min) and in 27 patients with cirrhosis and ascites (13 with a positive
CH2O
: 3.6 +/- 0.5; 14 with a negative
CH2O
: -0.37 +/- 0.007). Plasma
ADH
and UPGE2V were significantly increased in patients with a positive
CH2O
as compared with normal subjects. Patients with a negative
CH2O
showed a significantly higher plasma
ADH
and a lower UPGE2V and GFR than did normal subjects and patients with the positive
CH2O
. In 18 additional subjects (6 normal and 12 with cirrhosis, ascites, and a positive
CH2O
) submitted to a sustained water overload, the i.v. administration of 450 mg of lysine acetylsalicylate (LAS) induced a marked reduction of UPGE2V, but it had no effect on plasma
ADH
. LAS did not alter GFR and
CH2O
in normal subjects; however, it reduced
CH2O
in all the 12 patients (from 5.1 +/- 0.4 to 0.6 +/- 0.3) and the GFR in only 6 of these patients. These results suggest (a) that renal PGE2 plays an important role in the maintenance of water excretion in cirrhosis with ascites, and (b) that impaired ability to dilute the urine in cirrhosis may be a consequence of the simultaneous occurrence of impaired renal hemodynamics, nonostomic hypersecretion of
ADH
, and reduced renal production of PGE2.
...
PMID:Evidence that renal prostaglandins are involved in renal water metabolism in cirrhosis. 643 91
Hypoxia and hypercapnia have been shown to cause an increase in the concentration of
vasopressin
in plasma, but their effects on
vasopressin
in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) are not known. In addition, the effect of metabolic acidosis on plasma and CSF
vasopressin
has not been reported. In this study, plasma and CSF
vasopressin
levels were measured in anesthetized dogs subjected to either hypoxia, hypercapnia, or metabolic acidosis. Rate and depth of respiration were closely regulated with the aid of muscle paralysis and mechanical ventilation. Vasopressin increased markedly in both plasma and CSF during severe hypoxia (10% O2) and during hypercapnia (10%
CO2
) but did not change during either mild (15% O2) or moderate (12.5% O2) hypoxia. Although mild hypoxia by itself did not affect either plasma or CSF
vasopressin
, it did potentiate the increase in plasma and CSF
vasopressin
that was induced by severe hypercapnia, thus suggesting that hypoxia and hypercapnia may exert synergistic effects on
vasopressin
secretion. Metabolic acidosis produced by slow intravenous infusion of 1 N hydrochloric acid decreased arterial pH to values comparable to those induced by hypercapnia and increased
vasopressin
in plasma; CSF
vasopressin
was unchanged. These results are consistent with the concept that the source of
vasopressin
secreted into plasma may be different from that secreted into CSF.
...
PMID:Vasopressin in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid of dogs during hypoxia or acidosis. 649 66
We have evaluated the effects of indomethacin (I) and of a rich in linoleic acid phosphatidylcholine (E) on the renal function during in bolo infusion of lysine-8-
vasopressin
(LVP). 5 normal subjects have been studied in the absence of treatment (TA) and after treatment with I, E, E+I respectively. Two clearance (cl.) periods have been performed in the following time intervals: 0-30 min and 30-60 min after in bolo LVP (1.5 m-U.kg-1) infusion. Have been measured: the urinary flow rate, V, the endogenous creatinine cl., Cc, the osmotic clearances, Cosm,
CH2O
, the sodium and potassium cl., CNa, CK, the urinary prostaglandins (PG) of E series excretion (UPGV) by RIA method and the mean of arterial pressure (PA). 1) In TA condition LVP decreases V, Cosm, Cc,
CH2O
, CNa, CK and slightly increases the urinary osmolarity; these effects regress during the interval 30-60 min. 2) In I condition LVP produces a significant increment of PA and prolonged and intensified decrement of Cc,
CH2O
, V; in this condition the increase of urinary osmolarity is greater than in TA condition. 3) The E-treatment alone does not affect the LVP-induced renal effects; however the enhancement of these effects produced by I is attenuated in the presence of E though UPGV does not differ in I and E+I.
...
PMID:[Relation between acute changes in diuresis and renal prostaglandins. II. Induced antidiuresis]. 649 93
A microsystem for rotation-mediated aggregate cell culture studies has been devised to examine
vasopressin
(VP) biosynthesis of developing rat hypothalamus. Trypsin-dispersed hypothalamic tissue was placed into 24 well tissue culture dishes and VP content of culture medium and cells was measured over time by a radioimmunoassay. Reaggregates formed within 4 hr when rotated at 70 rpm in a humid
CO2
incubator. Nineteen days post coitus (dpc) hypothalamic reaggregates had 336 pg VP/10(6) cells while the medium showed 260 pg VP/ml after four days. Measurable VP was seen in fetal tissue after ten days while comparable amounts of VP were present in one day neonatal hypothalamus over this same period. Morphological examination of reaggregates indicated the presence of viable cells throughout the cell mass after ten days of culture. Co-cultivation studies with dispersed posterior pituitary indicated that reaggregates from one day neonate hypothalamus had significantly increased VP levels when co-cultured with one day neonatal posterior pituitary; however, this effect was not seen with 19 dpc co-cultures. These data demonstrate that development of neurosecretory activity of discrete regions of the hypothalamus can be examined early in vitro in a reaggregate cell culture system.
...
PMID:Vasopressin in reaggregated cell cultures of the developing hypothalamus. 660 52
The effects of increases in serum osmolality on renal function and plasma levels of radioimmunoassayable prolactin (PRL) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were examined during intracarotid (IC) infusions of hypertonic NaCl in conscious dogs with a sustained water diuresis (SWD). A 10 minute bilateral IC infusion of 45 mumole/kg X min X artery of NaCl during SWD which raised jugular osmolality by 10.1 mOsm/kg, without significantly altering peripheral venous osmolality, produced a significant decrease in free water clearance (
CH2O
) at 20 to 40 minutes postinfusion. IC infusions of 0.9% NaCl did not produce an antidiuretic response. No change in heart rate or blood pressure from preinfusion control values occurred during NaCl infusions. Elevations in cerebral osmolality did not result in changes in circulating levels of LH or PRL which qualitatively differed from levels of these hormones recorded during IC infusions of 0.9% NaCl. Although fluctuations in levels of LH occurred during experiments, renal function was not concomitantly affected. The results suggest that a specificity exists in the hormonal response to selective elevations of cerebral osmolality. The administration of TRH 3.8-4.2 micrograms/kg produced a transient increase in blood pressure and inhibited a water diuresis, the latter possibly as a result of releasing
antidiuretic hormone
.
...
PMID:Renal function and pituitary hormone release during cerebral osmostimulation and TRH in dogs. 667 91
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