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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A membrane fraction enriched in parathyroid hormone (PTH)-sensitive adenylate cyclase and sodium and
potassium
ion-activated (Na+, K+)-ATPase was prepared from bovine kidney. Tritiated PTH binding to this membrane fraction was dependent on both hormone and membrane protein concentration. Both total and specific binding of the hormone decreased significantly after 5 to 10 min of incubation at 22 degrees. PTH binding was highly specific, being sensitive to inhibition only with active forms of unlabeled hormone (native and 1-34 PTH). Specific binding showed a pH optimum of 7.3 to 7.5. Inhibition of binding of tritiated hormone by unlabeled PTH was also highly effective at pH 6.0, but this apparently specific binding was also inhibited by adrenocorticotropic hormone, insulin, glucagon, and
vasopressin
. Dissociation of bound hormone was demonstrated, and an apparent dissociation constant of 4.6 X 10(-2) min-1 was obtained. Specific binding was eliminated by pretreatment of the membranes with trypsin. The concentration dependence for inhibition of binding with unlabeled PTH was identical to that for activation of adenylate cyclase in this membrane preparation, and binding was also inhibited by concentrations of calcium in the 0.5 to 2 mM range.
...
PMID:Binding of tritiated bovine parathyroid hormone to plasma membranes from bovine kidney cortex. 1 29
In pentobarbital (35.0 mg/kg) anaesthetised dogs, bolus injections of prazosin into the femoral artery (3.0--300.0 microgram) provoked a dose-related fall in the vascular resistance of the innervated hind limb. In contrast to papaverine, prazosin failed to produce the same effect in dogs under spinal anaesthesia even when the intrinsic femoral vascular tone was increased with
vasopressin
. However, vasodilator effects of prazosin were again observed when the tone of the limb was elevated by either stimulating the sympathetic lumbar chain or by infusing alpha-adrenoceptor agonists. A significant reduction of both aortic blood pressure and pressor response to bilateral carotid artery occlusion was noted in a group of normotensive dogs anaesthetised 12 h after the last dose of prazosin given twice daily at 0.5 mg/kg, p.o., for 3 day period. This short-term treatment modified neither the resting heart rate nor the positive chronotropic effect induced by either intravenous noradrenaline or electrical stimulation of pre- and post-ganglionic nerve fibres of the right stellate ganglion. However, it prevented the larger increase in heart rate in response to bilateral carotid occlusion in placebo-treated dogs after section of the vagi. A decrease in baseline sympathetic tone of the perfused hind limb as well as vasoconstrictor effects produced by i.a. injections of several alpha-adrenoceptor agonists and electrical stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic chain was observed in prazosin-treated animals. The dose--pressor response profiles to these alpha-adrenoceptor stimulants after prazosin were not parallel to those obtained in the control group. The vasoconstrictor response to angiotensin II was not changed by prazosin. In rabbit aortic strips, prazosin (0.1--3.0 micrometer) produced competitive antagonism of the contractile responses induced by cirazoline, noradrenaline and phenylephrine. In contrast to papaverine, prazosin in concentrations up to 100.0 micrometer neither relaxed the aortic strips contracted by
potassium
ions nor modified the concentration-response curve to calcium ions. These studies indicate that blood pressure lowering effects of prazosin given acutely or for three days can be accounted for by a clear-cut functional impairment of vascular postsynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors. No evidence for a direct myorelaxant property of prazosin could be obtained in these studies.
...
PMID:Studies on the mechanism of the vasodilator effects of prazosin in dogs and rabbits. 2 80
The renal response of the fetal lamb to repeated complete occlusion of the umbilical cord was studied in nine chronically instrumented animals. Five episodes of occlusion of the umbilical cord, each lasting for two minutes, produced a twofold rise in fetal urine osmolality and sodium, chloride, and
potassium
concentrations. Output of urine and glomerular filtration rate remained essentially unchanged while free water clearance decreased from a control of +0.10 to -0.02 ml. per kilogram per minute at the end of the fifth episode. Electrolyte concentrations in urine remained elevated for at least two hours following the occlusions. In addition to changes in urine composition, there was a 50- to 200-fold increase in the fetal plasma concentration of
vasopressin
. These studies indicate that complete interruption of the umbilical circulation, even though of short duration, produces disturbances in fetal renal function that can lead to loss of electrolytes in the urine. They provide an explanation for the low sodium levels reported in asphyxiated newborn infants in renal failure.
...
PMID:Renal response of fetal lamb to complete occlusion of umbilical cord. 2 86
1. The proposition that changes in renal calcium excretion during
vasopressin
administration are positively correlated with concurrent changes in urine hydrogen ion concentration was tested by administration of
vasopressin
into twelve conscious diuresing sheep receiving either alkalinizing or acidifying infusions. 2. Vasopressin-induced antidiuresis in sheep with alkaline urine was associated with significant increases in urinary pH and decreases in the rate of calcium excretion whereas antidiuresis in sheep with acid urine was associated with significant decreases in urinary pH and no consistent effect on calcium excretion. 3. Magnesium excretion increased during
vasopressin
administration in most experiments regardless of urinary pH changes. 4. Vasopressin administration did not significantly alter the rate of excretion of sodium,
potassium
, chloride and phosphate or the rates of sodium,
potassium
, chloride, inulin, para-aminohippurate and osmolal clearance in sheep with either acid or alkaline urine.
Potassium
excretion and clearance in sheep with alkaline ruine was higher than that of sheep with acid urine during
vasopressin
infusion. 5. The results support the hypothesis that changes in renal tubular hydrogen ion concentration or bicarbonate concentration caused by water reabsorption from the collecting duct and possibly the late distal tubule could be part of the explanation for changes in renal calcium excretion which occur during
vasopressin
-induced antidiuresis.
...
PMID:Renal calcium and magnesium excretion during vasopressin administration into sheep with acid or alkaline urine. 4 39
A study has been conducted to determine the ionic and metabolic requirements for full expression of the hydroosmotic response to
antidiuretic hormone
in the toad urinary bladder. By appropriate manipulation of incubation conditions it can be shown that there is a pool of serosal sodium necessary for a full hormone response. This serosal sodium pool is not related to the transepithelial sodium transport pool A full hydroosmotic response also requires serosal
potassium
; however, no specific anion requirement was demonstrated. Additionally, anaerobic or aerobic metabolism support a full hydroosmotic response equally well.
...
PMID:Ionic and metabolic requirements for the hydroosmotic response to antidiuretic hormone in toad urinary bladder. 9 87
The effects of the
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) on the renal excretion of urea and electrolytes were studied in sheep, subjected to water stress, before and after 36-hour fasting. The intravenous administration of synthetic lysine-
vasopressin
(L-VP) at the dose of 100 microgram per kg induced only a temporary, statistically insignificant, drop of the urinary urea outputs by the fed as well as fasting sheep. L-VP did not influence the excretion of sodium and
potassium
electrolytes either. It follows from the results that there are no differences in the renal response to
ADH
between the fed sheep and sheep that have fasted for 36 hours.
...
PMID:[The effect of the antidiuretic hormone on the renal excretion of urea and electrolytes in fed and fasting sheep]. 10 79
1. Serum was collected from normal rats and from rats volume-expanded with isotonic sodium chloride solution. 2. The serum was fractionated by gel filtration on Sephadex G-25 and each fraction was tested for inhibitory activity against sodium-
potassium
-activated adenosine triphosphatase prepared from rat kidney homogenate. 3. A single low-molecular-weight fraction, eluting after the salts and after exogenously added lysine-
vasopressin
, had significantly greater enzyme inhibitory activity when obtained from serum of volume-expanded animals than from control serum. 4. As this fraction has been shown in previous independent studies to contain a natriuretic factor, it may be concluded that one property of this factor is the ability to inhibit sodium-
potassium
-activated adenosine triphosphatase.
...
PMID:Circulating inhibitor of sodium-potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase after expansion of extracellular fluid volume in rats. 14 41
Using Brattleboro rats with and without hereditary diabetes insipidus (DI, non-DI), blood pressure, water intake and the excretion of water, sodium,
potassium
and osmotically active substances were measured in intact individuals and in animals subjected to unilateral nephrectomy at the age of 23 or 80 days. The development of blood pressure (BP) changes, determined in unilaterally nephrectomized animals at the age of 4--6 months, depended on the age at which the kidney was removed. After nephrectomy at the age of 25 days, hypertension developed only in DI females given 0.6% NaCl solution to drink. The BP of those which drank water was unaffected. Unilateral nephrectomy at the age of 80 days produced a slight BP increase in females irrespective of whether they drank water or 0.6% NaCl, but in males only if they drank 0.6% NaCl solution. No hypertension was observed in intact animals. No relationship was found between water intake and the blood pressure level. The BP increase in water-drinking females uninephrectomized at 80 days was accompanied by a raised urine flow and raised excretion of osmotically active substances. Sodium losses in DI animals were greater than in non-DI animals and the urinary sodium concentration, in maximum dehydration, attained minimum values in DI and maximum values in non-DI animals. Unilateral nephrectomy at 25 days increased sodium losses in all the animals except non-DI females, but when performed at 80 days, only in DI males. No relationship between these results and BP changes was found. The possible relationship of the extrarenal consequences of absence of
vasopressin
to the development of experimental hypertension are discussed.
...
PMID:Blood pressure and water and electrolyte intake and excretion in rats (Brattleboro strain) after unilateral nephrectomy. 14 74
Lithium (Li+) chloride, 2 to 3 mEq. per kilogram of body weight, was administered intraperitoneally to normal Wistar rats daily for 4 to 66 days. This resulted in a marked reduction in urine osmolality (Uosm.) and increase in the excretion of water, Na+, K+, uric acid, and phosphate. The excretion of uric acid and
potassium
was a direct function of UNaV. The magnitude of depression in urine osmolality was significantly related to the rate of excretion of lithium in the urine, suggesting that the change in water reabsorption is dependent on the presence of the ion in the luminal side of the tubule. During 2 per cent saline diuresis, Li+-treated rats achieved less fractional free water reabsorption (TcH2O/GFR times 100) at any level of fractional osmolar clearance (Cosm./GFR times 100) than normal rats. On the other hand, during 0.225 per cent saline diuresis, fractional free water clearance (CH2O/GFR times 100) was normal over a wide range of fractional urine flow (V/GFR times 100), indicating intact function of the ascending limb of the loop of Henle. The intravenous infusion of
vasopressin
(VP) or dibutyryl cyclic-adenosine monophosphate (dcAMP) to Li+-treated rats resulted in a modest rise in Uosm. and a reduction in V/GFR times 100 and CH2O/GFR times 100. Although the response to VP appeared earlier than that to dibutyryl cyclic-AMP, the magnitude of the changes in Uosm., V/GFR times 100, and CH2O/GFR times 100 was eventually the same with both substances. Comparison between normal and Li+-treated rats revealed that the response to both VP and dibutyryl cyclic-AMP was blunted, albeit to a greater extent in the former. Inhibition by Li+ of adenylate cyclase will only partially explain the present data. Impairment in the release of endogenous VP or a block distal to the formation of cyclic-AMP must have played a role. In view of a normal diluting capacity and the increase in the excretion of phosphate and uric acid, it is suggested that Li+, when administered chronically in the present doses, inhibits proximal tubular reabsorption.
...
PMID:Renal effects of lithium administration in rats: alterations in water and electrolyte metabolism and the response to vasopressin and cyclic-adenosine monophosphate during prolonged administration. 16 79
This study conducted on the crewmembers of Skylab 3 was designed to evaluate the endocrinological adaption resulting from extend exposure to a space flight environment by identifying changes in hormonal and associated fluid and electrolyte parameters. The three men served as their own controls and were on a constant dietary intake. Complete metabolic collections were performed beginning 21 d before the flight, continuing throughout the flight, for 18 d postflight. Changes in fluid and electrolyte balance have been correlated with weight loss, changes in the excretion of aldosterone,
vasopressin
, and fluid compartments. Inter-individual variability was demonstrated in most experimental indices measured; however, statistically significant patterns have emerged which include: decreases in body weight and ADH, increases in plasma renin activity, and elevations in urinary catecholamines, aldosterone and cortisol concentrations. Urinary sodium was increased in flight but
potassium
was only slightly changed. Total body exchangeable K was slightly decreased in all three of the crewmen. Total body water and extracellular fluid were decreased postflight in almost all cases. The measured changes are consistent with the prediction that a relative increase in thoracic blood volume upon transiton to the zero gravity environment is interpretated as a true volume expasion resulting in a net fluid loss. This, in association with other factors, ultimately results in a reduction in intravascular volume leading to an increase in renin and a secondary aldosteronism. Once these compensatory mechanisms are effective in reestablishing positive water balance, the crewemn are considered to be essentially adapted to the space environment. Although the physiological cost of this adaptation must reflect the electrolyte deficit and perhaps other factors, it is assumed that the compensated state is adequate for the demands of the environment; however, this new homeostatic set is not believed to be without physiological cost and could, except with proper precautions, reduce the functional reserve of exposed individuals.
...
PMID:Metabolic and endocrine studies: the second manned Skylab mission. 17 19
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