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

Recent data on the effects of neurohypophysial peptides at the cellular level are discussed with respect to the two basic processes involved in peptide hormone action--i.e., specific recognition of the information contained in the hormonal molecule and the transformation of this information into a stimulus leading to the final biological response. Four main aspects of this general problem are considered. A. Hormone-Receptor Interaction: Recent contributions in this field concern partial analysis of the three-dimensional conformation of oxytocin and vasopressin moleculal cells of the mammalian kidney. Conformational analysis of oxytocin and vasopressin molecules leads to the conclusion that, in solution, these peptides probably have a compact and highly stabilized three-dimensional configuration. Models have been proposed that provide a valuable clue to the interpretation of structure-activity relationships among natural hormones and many structural analogues. Binding studies with tritiated oxytocin and vasopressin have permitted determination of the kinetic parameters of hormone-receptor interaction in amphibian epithelial cells and mammalian kidney. B. Stimulus Generation: The nature of the primary stimulus generated by hormone-receptor interaction is still unknown. In the epithelial target cells of the amphibian skin and bladder and of the mammalian kidney, one of the first consequences of hormone-receptor interaction is the activation of membrane-bound adenylate cyclase. Analysis of the correlations between hormonal binding and adenylate cyclase activation suggests that activation is a function of receptor occupation rather than of the number of hormonal molecules interacting with the receptor per unit of time. On medullary adenylate cyclase of pig kidney, the relation between receptor occupancy and enzyme activation was found to be complex and nonlinear. The effects of several agents (calcium, nucleotides) on receptor occupancy and adenylate cyclase activation have been described. In mammalian uterus and other smooth muscle target cells, there is no evidence for direct involvement of cyclic AMP in the contractile response to oxytocin and other neurohypophysial peptides.
...
PMID:Stimulus-response coupling in neurohypophysial peptide target cells. 17 91

Osmotic water movement across the toad urinary bladder in response to both vasopressin and cyclic AMP was inhibited by 10(-5) to 10(-4) M colchicine on the serosal but not on the mucosal side. This inhibitory effect was found to be time- and dose-dependent. Colchicine alone did not change basal osmotic flow and a baseline of the short-circuit current (Isc) and also did not affect a vasopressin-induced rise of the Isc. The inhibitory effect was not prevented by the addition of pyruvate. The osmotic water movement produced by 360 mM Urea (mucosal), 360 mM mannitol (serosal) or 2 mug/ml amphotericin B (mucosal), was not affected by 10(-4) M colchicine. These results suggest that colchicine inhibits some biological process subsequent to the formation of cyclic AMP except a directional cytoplasmic streaming process where microtubules may be involved.
...
PMID:Effect of colchicine on the osmotic water flow across the toad urinary bladder. 17 53

The electrical potential difference and short-circuit current (scc, reflecting active transmural sodium transport) across the toad urinary bladder in vitro was unaffected by the presence of hypo-osmotic solutions bathing the mucosal (urinary) surface, providing that the transmural flow of water was small. Vasopressin increased the scc across the toad bladder (the natriferic response), but this stimulation was considerably reduced in the presence of a hypo-osmotic solution on the mucosal side, conditions under which water transfer across the membrane was also increased. This inhibition of the natriferic response did not depend on the direction of the water movement, for if the osmotic gradient was the opposite way to that which normally occurs, the response to vasopressin was still reduced. The natriferic response to cyclic AMP was also inhibited in the presence of an osmotic gradient. Aldosterone increased the scc and Na+ transport across the toad bladder but this response was not changed when an osmotic gradient was present. The physiological implications of these observations and the possible mechanisms involved are discussed.
...
PMID:Osmotic inhibition of the natriferic response of the toad urinary bladder to vasopressin. 17 80

1 The effect of intravenous infusion of lithium, 2.56 mumol/min on the antidiuretic responses to antidiuretic hormone (ADH), adenosine triphosphate (ATP), 3'-5' adenosine cylic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) and theophyline was studied in water-loaded, alcohol-anaesthetized rats. 2 Lithium reversibly inhibits the antidiuretic response to all concentrations of ADH, depressing the maximum response but not changing the amount required for half maximal response. 3 The rate of increase of serum lithium relates more clearly to the inhibitory effect than does the serum concentration. 4 Sodium concentrations in the renal papilla seem to fall when serum lithium levels are rising. 5 Lithium inhibits the antidiuretic response to ATP and cyclic AMP but does not inhibit the response to theophyline.
...
PMID:The effects of lithium ions on the antidiuretic action of vasopressin in the rat. 17 68

The epithelial cells of the toad urinary bladder are morphologically heterogenous. In order to relate the effect of vasopressin on cyclic AMP metabolism to cell type, the epithelial cells were separated by the density gradient technique of Scott, Sapirstein and Yoder (Science 184:797, 1974). The separation was verified by electron-microscopy and by observing that the band of cells enriched in mitochondria-rich cells was enriched in carbonic anhydrase activity compared to the band of granular cells. A large portion of cells collected from the gradient was considered to be nonviable, precluding further study of their function as intact cells. Vasopressin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in homogenates of granular cells was simular to that in homogenates of mitochondria-rich cells. Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activity was also similar in the two types of cell. Thus, the enzymes known to be involved in cyclic AMP metabolism in response to vasopressin appear to be located in both major cell types.
...
PMID:Study of enzymes regulating vasopressin-stimulated cyclic AMP metabolism in separated mitochondria-rich and granular epithelial cells of toad urinary bladder. 17 64

Urea and water transport across the toad bladder epithelial cell appears to take place through independent vasopressin-stimulated pathways. Agents such as chromate, for example, when added to the luminal bathing medium, inhibit urea transport without inhibiting osmotic water flow, providing evidence for such independent pathways. In the present study, selective inhibition of urea transport is shown for permanganate and methylene blue, which like chromate, are oxidizing agents. Permanganate inhibits urea transport irreversibly, while methylene blue acts reversibly. Not all oxidizing agents are inhibitory; perchlorate, peroxide and ferricyanide have no effect on urea transport or water flow. Permanganate and chromate both act at a point beyond the generation of cyclic AMP, since they continue to inhibit urea transport in bladders treated with exogenous cyclic AMP, 8-bromoadenosine 3', 5'-cyclic monophosphate, and a combination of cyclic AMP and theophylline. These findings suggest that selective inhibition of urea transport can be brought about by oxidation of one or more components in its transport pathway, and that, in the case of chromate and permanganate, these components may be in the luminal membrane itself.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of urea transport by oxidizing agents. Evidence for a site of inhibition behond the generation of cyclic AMP. 17 62

Transitional epithelium lining rabbit urinary bladders was isolated and studied in vitro. The homogeneity of the isolated epithelium was demonstrated by light and electron microscopical monitoring as well as cell culture studies. Transitional epithelium responded to epinephrine and prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) in the presence of 2mM 1-methyl, 3-isobutylxanthine (MIX) with increases in intracellular levels of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP). Corticotropin, aldosterone, insulin, parathyroid hormone and vasopressin were slightly but significantly stimulatory under similar conditions. Glucagon and oxytocin were not stimulatory at the concentrations tested. The effects of epinephrine and PGE1 were potentiated by 2mM MIX 20-fold or greater. The cells were slightly more sensitive to PGE1 then to epinephrine. The prostaglandin produced a noticeable response at about 10nM, while effects of epinephrine were discernible at 0.1muM. Maximal responses to both effectors were seen at about 10muM. The action of 10muM epinephrine, but not 10muM PGE1, was completely abolished by 0.1mM propranolol. Responses to combinations of epinephrine and PGE1 were additive. Cyclic AMP accumulated in the incubation medium of transitional epithelial cells exposed to epinephrine, PGE1, MIX, or combinations of the agonists. The appearance of cyclic AMP in the medium was slow compared to the rate of intracellular accumulation, but reached significant levels following prolonged stimulation.
...
PMID:The effects of hormones on cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate accumulation in transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder. 17 60

The rate of active sodium transport as measured by short-circuit current across the isolated skin of the toad, Scaphiopus couchi, was elevated following vasopressin (0.2 units/ml) or arginine vasotocin (0.1 units/ml) treatment of skins from active animals at all times of the year tested. Skins from dormant animals showed no such elevation at any time of the year. The rate of active sodium transport was elevated following treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP (2.5mM) plus theophylline (10 mM) in all skins tested. The hydraulic conductivity of isolated skins from both active and dormant animals showed no significant change following treatment with vasopressin (0.2 units/ml) or arginine vasotocin (0.1 units/ml except on the first day following emergence from dormancy in the field. A correlation was, therefore, observed between the occurrence of a hydroosmotic response to antidiuretic hormones and the seasonal exposure of S. couchi to standing water. A small but significant elevation of hydraulic conductivity was observed across the skins of dormant toads following treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP (2.5 mM) plus theophylline (10 mM) whereas a substantial elevation was observed with the skins of active animals.
...
PMID:Variation in the effects of antidiuretic hormone on the isolated skin of the toad, Scaphiopus couchi. 17 15

Vasopressin increases the permeability of the total urinary bladder, an analogue of the mammalian renal collecting duct, to water and small solutes, especially the amide urea. We have observed that three general anesthetic agents of clinical importance, the gases methoxyflurane and halothane and the ultrashortacting barbiturate methohexital, reversibly inhibit vasopressin-stimulated water flow, but do not depress permeability to urea, or the the lipophilic solute diphenylhydantoin. In contrast to their effects in vasopressin-treated bladders, the anesthetics do not inhibit cyclic AMP-stimulated water flow, consistent with an effect on vasopressin-responsive adenylate cyclase. The selectivity of the anesthetic-induced depression of water flow suggests that separate adenylate cyclases and cyclic AMP pools may exist for control of water and urea permeabilities in to toad bladder. Furthermore, theophylline's usual stimulatory effect on water flow, but not its effect on urea permeability, was entirely abolished in methoxyflurane-treated bladders, suggesting that separate phosphodiesterases that control water and urea permeabilities are present as well. We conclude that the majority of water and urea transport takes place via separate pathways across the rate-limiting luminal membrane of the bladder cell, and that separate vasopressin-responsive cellular pools of cyclic AMP appear to control permeability to water and to urea.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of osmotic water flow by general anesthetics to toad urinary bladder. 18 13

1. Physiological concentrations of antidiuretic hormone increase diffusional water permeability but not measurable cyclic AMP content in the isolated papilla of the rat's kidney. 2. Theophylline (6 mM) increases diffusional water permeability and cyclic AMP content in the isolated papilla of the rat's kidney. 3. The increase in water permeability is detected with 5 muunits.ml-1 of ADH and is maximal with 50 muunits.ml-1. The same maximum was achieved with 6 mM theophylline. 4. Cyclic AMP and dibutyryl cyclic AMP both increase water permeability, but to a lesser extent than theophylline or ADH. 5. In the presence of theophylline, ADH causes a dose related generation of tissue cyclic AMP up to a dose of 2,000,000 muunits.ml-1. 6. Adenyl cyclase is increasingly activated by ADH up to doses of 2,000,000 muunits.ml-1. 7. These results suggest that while ADH activates the adenyl cyclase system and changes water permeability there are sufficient disparities to cast doubt on an exclusive role for cyclic AMP as the second messenger.
...
PMID:The interrelationships between antidiuretic hormone, adenyl cyclase, tissue cyclic AMP and diffusional water permeability. 18 92


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>