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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The enzyme activities of cyclic
AMP
system in the neuro- and adenohypophyses were studied, immediately after an irradiation by a single whole body exposure of 1600 R, in an attempt to find whether this intervention causes the changes in the responsiveness of the cyclic
AMP
regulatory system. In the irradiated rats the neurohypophyses revealed a reduced activity of adenylate cyclase, moderately increased activity of phosphodiesterase and slightly decreased activity of protein kinase, including the value stimulated by cyclic
AMP
. In the adenohypophyses the irradiation did not cause any significant changes in the enzyme activities of the cyclic
AMP
system, except of slightly decreased adenylate cyclase activity. The possible relationship of the plasma level of
antidiuretic hormone
immediately after irradiation and the enzyme activities of cyclic
AMP
system is discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of irradiation on enzyme activities of cyclic AMP system in the neuro- and adenohypophyses. 21 Apr 9
A 6-week-old girl with fever, hypernatraemia, dehydration, and polyuria failed to concentrate urine in response to exogenous
vasopressin
administration. There was no family history of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. When she was 15 months old, the infusion of
vasopressin
did not produce an increase in urinary cyclic-
AMP
.
...
PMID:Congenital nephrogenic diabetes insipidus in a baby girl. 21 90
Whereas adenosine itself exerted independent stimulatory and inhibitory effects on the adenylate cyclase activity of a platelet particulate fraction at low and high concentrations respectively, 2-substituted and N6-monosubstituted adenosines had stimulatory but greatly decreased inhibitory effects. Deoxyadenosines, on the other hand, had enhanced inhibitory but no stimulatory effects. The most potent inhibitors found were, in order of increasing activity, 9-(tetrahydro-2-furyl)adenine (SQ 22536), 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine and 2'-deoxyadenosine 3'-monophosphate. Kinetic studies on prostaglandin E1-activated adenylate cyclase showed that the inhibition caused by either 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine or compound SQ 22536 was non-competitive with MgATP and that the former compound, at least, showed negative co-operativity; 50% inhibition was observed with 4 micron-2',5'-dideoxyadenosine or 13 micron-SQ 22536. These two compounds also inhibited both the basal and prostaglandin E1-activated adenylate cyclase activities of intact platelets, when these were measured as the increases in cyclic [3H]
AMP
in platelets that had been labelled with [3H]adenine and were then incubated briefly with papaverine or papaverine and prostaglandin E1. Both compounds, but particularly 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine, markedly decreased the inhibition by prostaglandin E1 of platelet aggregation induced by ADP or [arginine]
vasopressin
as well as the associated increases in platelet cyclic
AMP
, so providing further evidence that the effects of prostaglandin E1 on platelet aggregation are mediated by cyclic
AMP
. 2'-Deoxyadenosine 3'-monophosphate did not affect the inhibition of aggregation by prostaglandin E1, suggesting that the site of action of deoxyadenosine derivatives on adenylate cyclase is intracellular. Neither 2',5'-dideoxyadenosine nor compound SQ 22536 alone induced platelet aggregation. Moreover, neither compound potentiated platelet aggregation or the platelet release reaction when suboptimal concentrations of ADP, [arginine]
vasopressin
, collagen or arachidonate were added to heparinized or citrated platelet-rich plasma in the absence of prostaglandin E1. These results show that cyclic
AMP
plays no significant role in the responses of platelets to aggregating agents in the absence of compounds that increase the platelet cyclic
AMP
concentration above the resting value.
...
PMID:Inhibition of adenylate cyclase by adenosine analogues in preparations of broken and intact human platelets. Evidence for the unidirectional control of platelet function by cyclic AMP. 21 36
PGE1 and PGE2 are known to interfere with the water permeability effect of
vasopressin
in toad bladder and kidney. It has been proposed that endogenous prostaglandin E (PGE), synthesized within cells of
vasopressin
-sensitive tissues, serves to modulate the permeability changes elicited by the
neurohypophyseal
hormone. Direct evidence in support of this hypothesis is as follows:
vasopressin
increases the biosynthesis of PGE2 in renal interstitial cells and in isolated toad bladder. In the latter, inhibition of
vasopressin
-induced synthesis of PGE by a variety of inhibitors results in a greater water permeability response to
vasopressin
. It appears that
vasopressin
has two effects in toad bladder and kidney: (i) it activates adenylate cyclase thereby increasing the concentration of adenosine 3',5' monophosphate (cyclic
AMP
), the nucleotide responsible for the resultant increase in water permeability; and (ii) it activates a phospholipase that serves to release arachidonic acid, the precursor of PGE2 from intracellular pools. The PGE derived from the arachidonic acid diminishes adenylate-cyclase activity, in consequence of which the response of the enzyme to
vasopressin
is modulated.
...
PMID:Role of prostaglandin E (PGE) in the modulation of the action of vasopressin on water flow in the urinary bladder of the toad and mammalian kidney. 21 71
1. The effects of adrenalectomy on the adenylate cyclase--adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic
AMP
) system of rat renal medulla were examined to evaluate the mechanism of the impaired water diuresis in glucocorticoid deficiency. 2. Concentrations of cyclic
AMP
in medullary tubules from adrenalectomized rats were significantly higher than in the tubules from control animals both in the presence and absence of
antidiuretic hormone
. 3. This abnormality was corrected by the treatment in vivo of the adrenalectomized rats with dexamethasone, but addition of this drug to the incubation medium did not abolish the differences in cyclic
AMP
between tubules from adrenalectomized and normal rats. 4. The activity of adenylate cyclase or cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase in vitro was not affected by adrenalectomy. 5. In glucocorticoid deficiency, the concentration of cyclic
AMP
in medullary tubules is increased both with and without
antidiuretic hormone
. This abnormality may render medullary tubules more permeable to water and may underlie the impaired water diuresis in glucocorticoid deficiency.
...
PMID:Effects of glucocorticoid deficiency on renal medullary cyclic adenosine monophosphate of rats. 21 86
DDAVP, 1-desamino-8-D-
arginine-vasopressin
, is a synthetic analog of arginine vasopressin which produces prolonged antidiuresis after intranasal administration to patients with complete central diabetes insipidus. We have studied the mechanism of the prolonged antidiuretic effect by specific radioimmunossay of DDAVP in plasma of patients and by in vitro studies on the adenylate cyclase-cylic
AMP
system of the rat outer renal medulla. When DDAVP was administredd to patients, all responded, but the duration of response among patients varied from 5-21 h. The peak level of DDAVP in plasma was achieved up to 4 h after administration indicating a slow absorption from the nasal mucosa. The disappearance time of DDAVP from plasma correlated significantly with the duration of antidiuresis, P less than 0.001. On a molar basis DDAVP was 3-fold greater than AVP in its stimulation of outer medullary adenylate cyclase activity and 10-fold greater than AVP in its stimulation of cyclic
AMP
content. The prolonged antidiuresis of intranasally administered DDAVP is due to slow absorption, presistence in plasma, and enchanced effect on the kidney.
...
PMID:DDAVP (1-desamino-8-D-arginine-vasopressin) treatment of central diabetes insipidus--mechanism of prolonged antidiuresis. 22 17
Angiotensin II, catecholamines, and
vasopressin
are thought to stimulate hepatic glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis via a cyclic
AMP
-independent mechanism that requires calcium ion. The present study explores the possibility that angiotensin II and
vasopressin
control the activity of regulatory enzymes in carbohydrate metabolism through Ca2+-dependent changes in their state of phosphorylation. Intact hepatocytes labeled with [32P]PO43- were stimulated with angiotensin II, glucagon, or
vasopressin
and 30 to 33 phosphorylated proteins resolved from the cytoplasmic fraction of the cell by electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide slab gels. Treatment of the cells with angiotensin II or
vasopressin
increased the phosphorylation of 10 to 12 of these cytosolic proteins without causing measurable changes in cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity. Glucagon stimulated the phosphorylation of the same set of 11 to 12 proteins through a marked increase in cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity. The molecular weights of three of the protein bands whose phosphorylation was increased by these hormones correspond to the subunit molecular weights of phosphorylase (Mr = 93,000), glycogen synthase (Mr = 85,000), and pyruvate kinase (Mr = 61,000). Two of these phosphoprotein bands were positively identified as phosphorylase and pyruvate kinase by affinity chromatography and immunoprecipitation, respectively. Incubation of hepatocytes in a Ca2+-free medium completely abolished the effects of angiotensin II and
vasopressin
on protein phosphorylation but did not alter those of glucagon. Treatment of hepatocytes with angiotensin II, glucagon, or
vasopressin
stimulated phosphorylase activity by 250 to 260%, inhibited glycogen synthase activity by 50%, and inhibited pyruvate kinase activity by 30 to 35% (peptides) to 70% (glucagon). The effects of angiotensin II and
vasopressin
on the activity of all three enzymes were completely abolished if the cells were incubated in a Ca2+-free medium while those of glucagon were not altered. The results imply that angiotensin II, catecholamines, and
vasopressin
control hepatic carbohydrate metabolism through a Ca2+-requiring, cyclic
AMP
-independent pathway that leads to the phosphorylation of important regulatory enzymes.
...
PMID:The role of calcium ion as a mediator of the effects of angiotensin II, catecholamines, and vasopressin on the phosphorylation and activity of enzymes in isolated hepatocytes. 22 57
Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells grown in tissue culture have the morphological properties of distal tubular epithelial cells, form tight junctions, and lack several proximal tubular enzyme markers.
Adenylate
cyclase in these cells was stimulated by
vasopressin
, oxytocin, prostaglandins E1 and E2, glucagon, and cholera toxin. Hormone-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity in isolated membrane preparations was dependent on low concentrations of GTP and had the MgCl2 and pH optima expected for the kidney enzyme. The results, as well as the demonstration of enhanced hemicyst formation induced by cyclic
AMP
, suggest that the MDCK cell line has retained the differentiated properties of the kidney epithelial cell of origin. When MDCK cells were injected into baby nude mice, continuous nodule growth was observed until adulthood was attained. Histological studies revealed the presence of two cell types: normal mouse fibroblasts which comprise 80--90% of the solid nodule mass, and MDCK cells, which formed epithelial sheets lining internal fluid-filled glands. Electron microscope analysis showed that the mucosal surfaces of the cells were characterized by microvilli which faced the lumen of the glands, that adjacent MDCK cells were joined by tight junctions, and that the serosal surfaces of the epithelial sheets were characterized by smooth plasma membranes which were lined by a continuous basement membrane. These observations lead to the conclusion that the MDCK cells retain regional differentiation of their plasma membranes and the ability to regenerate kidney tubule-like structures in vivo.
...
PMID:Retention of differentiated properties in an established dog kidney epithelial cell line (MDCK). 22 73
Vasopressin increases the permeability of receptor cells to water and, in tissues such as toad bladder, to solutes such as urea. While cyclic
AMP
appears to play a major role in mediating the effects of
vasopressin
, there is evidence that activation of the water permeability system and the urea permeability system involves separate pathways. In the present study, we have shown that inhibitors of oxidative metabolism (rotenone, dinitrophenol, and methylene blue) selectively inhibit either
vasopressin
-stimulated water flow or
vasopressin
-stimulated urea transport. There was no inhibition, however, when exogenous cyclic
AMP
was substituted for
vasopressin
, and little to no inhibition when the potent analogue 8-bromoadenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (8-Br-cAMP) was employed. Rotenone had no effect on adenylate cyclase activity or cyclic
AMP
levels within the cell; dinitrophenol decreased adenylate cyclase activity minimally. Additional studies with vinblastine and nocodazole, inhibitors of microtubule assembly, demonstrated an inhibition of
vasopressin
and cyclic
AMP
-stimulated water flow but showed no effect on urea transport. We would conclude that water and urea transport, as examples of hormone-stimulated processes, have different links to cell metabolism, and that in addition to cyclic
AMP
, a non-nucleotide pathway may be involved in the action of
vasopressin
.
...
PMID:Effect of metabolic inhibitors on vasopressin-stimulated transport systems in the toad bladder. 22 66
The effects of in vivo physiologic doses of
vasopressin
and 1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) on the cyclic
AMP
content of plasma, urine, and renal papillary tissue were determined in the ADH-deficient Brattleboro rat. During clearance studies, plasma cyclic
AMP
concentrations and both total and nephrogenous urinary cyclic
AMP
excretion in
vasopressin
- and DDAVP-treated rats were similar to the values in time-matched controls. In contrast, in situ renal papillary cyclic
AMP
content was higher (P less than 0.001) in both
vasopressin
- (35.7 +/- 3.6 pmol/mg protein) and DDAVP- (29.7 +/- 2.2 pmol/mg protein) treated rats compared to controls (15.1 +/- 1.3 pmol/mg protein). Endogenous stimulation of
vasopressin
by dehydration in normal rats increased both papillary cyclic
AMP
content (27.1 +/- 2.7 pmol/mg protein) and urine osmolality, whereas no change in papillary cyclic
AMP
was observed following dehydration in Brattleboro rats (13.6 +/- 0.8 pmol/mg protein) despite an increase in urine osmolality. The results demonstrate that changes in cyclic
AMP
following in vivo
vasopressin
are best demonstrated by measurement of in situ cyclic
AMP
content of the renal papilla, whereas total urinary cyclic
AMP
and nephrogenous cyclic
AMP
are not useful indices of tubular sensitivity to this hormone.
...
PMID:Dissociation between plasma, urine, and renal papillary cyclic AMP content following vasopressin and DDAVP. 22 12
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