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)

Free flow electrophoresis was employed to separate renal cortical plasma membranes into luminal (brush border microvilli) and contraluminal (basal-lateral membrane) fractions. During the separation adenylate cyclase activity was found to parallel the activity of Na+-K+-activated ATPase, an enzyme which is present in contraluminal but not in luminal membranes. In the basal-lateral membrane fraction the specific activities of adenylate cyclase and Na+-K+-activated ATPase were 4.4 and 4.6 times greater, respectively, than in the brush border fraction. The adenylate cyclase of the basal-lateral membrane fraction was specifically stimulated by parathyroid hormone which maximally increased enzyme activity eightfold. The biologically active (1-34) peptide fragment of paratyhroid hormone produced a 350% increase in adenylate cyclase activity. In contrast, calcitonin, epinephrine and vasopressin maximally stimulated the enzyme by only 55, 35 and 30%, respectively. These results indicate that adenylate cyclase, specifically stimulated by parathyroid hormone, is distributed preferentially in the contraluminal region of the plasma membrane of renal cortical epithelial cells.
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PMID:Distribution of parathyroid hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase in plasma membranes of cells of the kidney cortex. 17 37

Single pharmacological doses of parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, vasopressin, d-aldosterone, or L-triiodothyronine produced a significant increase in the ornithine decarboxylase activity of rat kidney. The activity of kidney ornithine decarboxylase was also enhanced by other hormones, such as pentagastrin and serotonin, which, although they are not known to modify kidney physiology, are secreted by cells having close relationships to the calcitonin-secreting parafollicular cells. The induction of the enzyme was observed in hypophysectomized rats, with or without some other hormone-secreting glands remaining. However, the magnitude of the stimulation elicited by the hormones was somewhat diminished in animals still having the endocrine gland whose hormone was being tested. The maximal stimulation of kidney ornithine decarboxylase activity by parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, vasopressin, L-triiodothyronine, pentagastrin, and serotonin occurred at 4 h after the hormone injection. The enhancement in ornithine decarboxylase activity produced by d-aldosterone was maximal at 3 h after the injection of the hormone. The content of ornithine in the kidney was found to be virtually unchanged whatever the type of hormone treatment. No statistically significant increases in renal ornithine decarboxylase activity of hypophysectomized animals were observed after injection of melatonin or of vitamin D3. Since the stimulating hormones possess clearly different mechanisms of action, the role of cyclic AMP as a general mediator of ornithine decarboxylase induction is questioned.
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PMID:In vivo hormonal induction of ornithine decarboxylase in rat kidney. 18 46

Many hormones initiate their biologic actions by augmenting the intracellular concentrations of 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate (cyclic AMP). The nucleotide has been found in body fluids; its determination in plasma and urine can be performed by a rapid, simple and specific method: the cyclic AMP assay kit of the Radiochemical Centre (Amersham, England). The assay is based on the competition between unlabelled cAMP and a fixed quantity of the tritium labelled compound for binding to a bovine muscle protein which has a high specificity and affinity for cAMP. Different factors must be considered in evaluating the 24 h urinary content of the nucleotide: the renal or extrarenal origin of cAMP and the functional status of the kidneys. In basal conditions the urinary cAMP excretion is significantly correlated with creatinine excretion (n = 67; r = 0.47; p less than 0.001) thus confirming that the most part of cAMP excreted is derived from the plasma by glomerular filtration. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) stimulates adenylate cyclase predominantly in the renal cortex, whereas vasopressin (ADH) stimulated the enzyme in the medulla; thus PTH and ADH could increase the amount of cAMP in the urine from the renal source. In a case of diabetes insipidus and infusion of ADH caused a prompt rise in cAMP urinary excretion. In 5 normals an infusion of bovine synthetic parathyroid hormone caused an increased excretion of cAMP that preceded the phosphaturic response. An infusion of salmon synthetic calcitonin caused a rise in phosphate excretion and no increase in cAMP urinary content. As it concerns the two calciotopic hormones, PTH and CT, it is reasonable to assume that renal receptors are distinct. The 24 h urinary excretion of cAMP in 55 control subjects (3613 +/- 1460 D.S. n moles) was contrasted with the lower excretion in 25 elderly subjects (70-93 years: 1804 +/- 699 n moles), with the high cAMP excretion in a patient with hyperparathyroidism (that fell to normal values following removal of the parathyroid adenoma) and with the low cAMP excretion in patients with primary or surgical hypoparathyroidism. The mean 24 h cAMP excretion in patients with renal insufficiency was significantly decreased when compared to control subjects. These findings and recent reports confirm that the 24 h urinary output of cAMP may be considered an useful index of pharathyroid function in man.
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PMID:[The diagnostic value of the determination of cyclic 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) in urine]. 19 Jun 33

Frequency of ectopic hormonal secretions by lung carcinomas is evaluated about 10 percent. Clinical and biological manifestations are less frequently registered than circulating hormonal products which can be considered as evolution markers of the disease. The main secretions and their clinical consequences are described: parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcitonin (CT), growth hormone (GH), antidiuretic hormone (ADH), corticotrophin hormone (ACTH) and gonadotrophins (HCG, LH, FSH). Problems raised by detection of these hormone-like acting products are studied and different hypothesis are suggested as explanation of these secretions.
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PMID:[Endocrine secretions by bronchial tumors]. 21 26

To investigate a possible action of insulin on the glomerulus, the binding 125I-insulin to the isolated glomeruli prepared from rat kidney was examined. When incubated at 22 degrees C, 125I-insulin binding proceeded with time and reached a steady state at 45 min at which time nonspecific binding was less than 25% of total binding. A small fraction of 125I-insulin was degraded during incubation. This binding was specific to insulin in that it was inhibited by unlabeled porcine and beef insulins and to a lesser extent by porcine proinsulin and desalanine-desasparagine insulin, but not by glucagon, parathyroid hormone, vasopressin, calcitonin, and angiotensin II. Increasing concentrations of nonlabeled insulin displaced 125I-insulin binding in a dose-dependent fashion. Scatchard plot of the data was curvilinear consistent with either two classes of receptors with different affinities or a single class of receptors that demonstrate negative cooperativity. The addition of excess nonlabeled insulin to the glomeruli preincubated with 125I-insulin resulted in a rapid dissociation of approximately or equal to 70% of bound 125I-insulin. Insulin decreased the increments in glomerular cyclic AMP levels by epinephrine and by prostaglandin E2, but not those by histamine. These data showed the presence of specific insulin receptors in the glomeruli, and that insulin action may be, at least in part, through modulation of glomerular cyclic AMP concentrations. Such action of insulin may underlie the alteration in glomerular ultrafiltration and the glomerular ultrafiltration and the development of glomerular lesions in diabetes mellitus, a disease in which insulin deficiency or the tissue resistance to insulin exists.
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PMID:Binding of 125I-insulin to the isolated glomeruli of rat kidney. 50 Aug 16

Recent data on various environmental stressors and blood hormone patterns are presented for lactating cattle. Known stressor effects of such factors as environmental temperature, air pollution, and noise on the plasma thyroxine, growth hormone, cortisol, prolactin, progesterone, luteinzing hormone, epinephrine, and norepinephrine of lactating cattle are discussed. Information on stressor effects is lacking on glucagon, insulin, vasopressin, calcitonin, oxytocin, thyrotrophic hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, melatonin, parathyroid hormone, and estrogens in the lactating cow. The importance of evaluating both the effect of environmental stressor and of production or lactation intensity is emphasized in the overall interpretation of changes in hormone of plasma. The short and long term environmental heat effects on thyroxine, cortisol, and growth hormone are clear with initial increased due to acute stressors and a decline of amounts in plasma after prolonged exposure to stressors. The relationship of amounts in plasma of these hormones to milk production appears to be related directly for cortisol, growth hormone, and prolactin with an inverse relationship with thyroxine. Epinephrine and norepinephrine seem to be elevated with prolonged environmental heat stress. However, the influence of intensity of lactation has not been measured. Hormones in plasma as they relate to stressor effects and milk production are important as potential indicators of the physiological state of a cow and reflect the physiological compensations a cow undergoes at various lactation intensities and/or stress exposure.
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PMID:Effects of environmental and other stressors on blood hormone patterns in lactating animals. 98 81

Short-term desensitization to hormone-induced cAMP accumulation was investigated in the medullary (MTAL) and the cortical (CTAL) thick ascending limbs of Henle's loop isolated by microdissection from the rat kidney. The following agonists were studied: vasopressin, glucagon and human calcitonin in the MTAL, and vasopressin, glucagon, human calcitonin, parathyroid hormone (PTH) and the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol in the CTAL. Isolated tubules were preincubated in vitro for 60 min in the presence or absence of a maximal concentration of one of the five agonists (vasopressin 10 nM, glucagon 10 nM, calcitonin 100 nM, PTH 10 nM, isoproterenol 1 microM). Desensitization induced by each agent to its own action was then quantified by measuring the amount of cAMP accumulating in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine and the same agonist concentration as that used during preincubation. In the MTAL, as previously reported, preincubation with vasopressin led to a marked (80%-85%) desensitization to this hormone. A significant hormone self-induced desensitization of about 45% was also obtained with glucagon, but not with calcitonin. In the CTAL, the following order of potency to elicit desensitization was observed: vasopressin (80%) greater than isoproterenol (50%) greater than glucagon (30%) greater than PTH (20%, NS) greater than calcitonin (10%, NS). Thus, the magnitude of desensitization varied greatly from one hormone to another, but for a given hormone, was of roughly similar extent in both MTAL and CTAL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Differential short-term desensitization to vasopressin, isoproterenol, glucagon, parathyroid hormone and calcitonin in the thick ascending limb of rat kidney. 131 67

LLC-PK1/PKE20 cells (a continuous epithelial cell line) has two different Na/H exchange activities: Na/H-1 located in the basolateral membrane and Na/H-2 located in the apical membrane [Casavola et al. (1989) Biochem Biophys Res Commun 165:833-837; Haggerty et al. (1988) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 86:6797-6801]. In the present report we have studied hormone regulation of these exchange activities by measuring Na-dependent recovery of pHi from an acid load (by using microspectrofluorometry and 2,7-bis(carboxyethyl)-5,6-carboxyfluorescein) in response to activation of regulatory cascades by either pharmacological agents or by vasopressin or calcitonin. Agents leading to activation of protein kinase A (cAMP-dependent), such as forskolin (10 microM), 8-Br-cAMP (0.25 mM), and isobutylmethylxanthine (0.5 mM), inhibited Na/H-2 and Na/H-1 by an average of 49%. Stimulation of protein kinase C by a phorbol ester (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, TPA, 100 nM) inhibited Na/H-2 (by an average of 48%) and stimulated Na/H-1 (by an average of 38%); these effects of TPA were also observed in the presence of forskolin (100 microM). Addition of either vasopressin (2 microM) or calcitonin (0.3 microM) onto both sides of the monolayer decreased the activity of Na/H-2 by an average of 26.3% and 27.7% respectively, and stimulated the activity of Na/H-1 by an average of 17.4% and 38.7% respectively; exposure of cells to either hormone stimulated production of cAMP and inositol trisphosphate, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Polarized expression of Na+/H+ exchange activity in LLC-PK1/PKE20 cells: II. Hormonal regulation. 131 51

We have recently shown that (a) [125I-Tyr8]bradykinin (BK) recognized bradykinin binding sites in guinea pig epithelium membranes with a Kd value of 1.6 nM and a Bmax of 156 fmol/mg protein, and (b) B2 agonists and some B2 antagonists, such as D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK, inhibited this specific binding with a Ki value of 32 nM. In the present study, we have radioiodinated the B2 antagonist Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK and have performed a full characterization of the binding properties of this tracer in the same membrane preparation. Equilibrium experiments performed in the absence or presence of an excess of BK (10(-5) M) showed that 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK specifically labelled two different sites. One of these is the same as the site labelled by [125I-Tyr8]BK, and this indicates that 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK interacts specifically with kinin B2 receptors. Equilibrium experiment performed in the presence of an excess of BK (10(-5) M) indicated that specific binding of 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK to the second site is also saturable and Scatchard analysis showed that the site is of high affinity with a Kd of 16.8 nM and a Bmax of 2.08 pmol/mg protein. Surprisingly, unlabelled B2 agonists such as bradykinin, [Tyr8]BK, [Leu8]BK, [Hyp3,Tyr8(OMe)]BK, D-Arg-[Hyp3]BK and kallidin were found to be inactive on this second site. A series of B2 receptor antagonists, Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK, D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK, D-Arg-[Hyp3,Leu5,8,D-Phe7]BK, D-Arg-[Hyp3,Gly6,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK and D-Arg-[Hyp3,Thi5,8,D-Phe7]BK inhibited 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK binding with Ki values of 25.0, 20.9, 15.8, 64.6 and 6606.9 nM respectively. On the other hand, [Thi5,8,D-Phe7]BK did not interfere with 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK but was found to be a potent inhibitor of [125I-Tyr8]BK binding (Ki = 53.7 nM). As expected, B1 receptor agonists, antagonists and peptides non-related to BK such as substance P, neurokinin A, neurokinin B, angiotensin II, bombesin, vasopressin and the calcitonin gene related peptide were unable to compete with 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK. The results show that 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK is interacting with two distinct binding sites in the guinea pig epithelium: one is the well known bradykinin B2 receptor and the other is a new, non-characterized binding site that interacts exclusively with some bradykinin receptor antagonists.
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PMID:Characterization of a novel binding site for 125I-Tyr-D-Arg-[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]bradykinin on epithelial membranes of guinea pig ileum. 132 66

Kinins are endogenously formed peptides that have diverse biological actions, including effects on the gastrointestinal tract. In the search of selective ligands, we studied the binding properties of a selective B2 radioiodinated antagonist (Tyr,D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK) on epithelial membranes of guinea pig ileum. Equilibrium binding experiments showed that 125I-Tyr,D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK specifically labels two different sites. One of these sites is the conventional B2 receptor. The new tracer recognized this site with a Kd of 34.7 nM and revealed a Bmax of 156 fmol/mg protein. In equilibrium binding experiments 125I-Tyr,D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK also recognized a second specific site. Scatchard analysis showed that this second site was of high affinity (Kd of 16.8 nM) and very abundant (Bmax of 2.08 pmol/mg protein). Surprisingly, the natural B2 agonists bradykinin and kallidin were unable to inhibit the specific binding of 125I-Tyr,D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK to the second site. A series of B2 antagonists failed to inhibit the specific binding of the new radiolabelled peptide. As expected, non related peptides such as angiotensin II, neurokinin A and B, substance P, vasopressin, calcitonin gene related peptide and bombesin were also inactive. These results show that the new tracer is interacting with two distinct binding sites in epithelial membranes of guinea pig ileum. One is the well known bradykinin B2 receptor and the other is a new, non characterized binding site that interacts exclusively with bradykinin receptor antagonists.
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PMID:125I-Tyr,D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]BK, a radiolabelled B2 antagonist specifically interacts with two distinct binding sites on epithelial membranes of guinea pig ileum. 133 30


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