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)

The effects of agonists at kappa, mu and delta opioid receptors were determined on vasopressin levels in water-deprived rats. Bremazocine and U-50, 488 (kappa agonists) markedly suppressed vasopressin levels, whereas morphine and methadone (mu agonists) and metkephamid (a mixed mu and delta agonist) did not suppress vasopressin levels. Likewise, clonidine, a potent diuretic in normally hydrated rats, did not clearly suppress vasopressin levels. Metkephamid was shown to have a modest diuretic effect in normally hydrated rats but not in water-deprived rats. The diuretic effects of bremazocine were blocked completely by simultaneous treatment with desmopressin, a synthetic vasopressin-like analog. Desmopressin also blocked the diuretic effect of a waterload, but only partially attenuated the diuretic effect of clonidine. These results support the hypothesis that kappa opioid agonists produce a diuretic effect by suppressing plasma levels of vasopressin, and at higher doses produce a pattern of urination similar to animals lacking vasopressin. By comparison, mu and delta opioid agonists have little effect on vasopressin levels in water-deprived rats.
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PMID:Diuresis and suppression of vasopressin by kappa opioids: comparison with mu and delta opioids and clonidine. 299 2

Marked diuresis has previously been reported after administration of kappa opioid agonists. The present study shows that this effect is stereospecific; MR-2034 markedly increased urinary output over the dose range 0.08 to 1.25 mg/kg, whereas the opposite isomer, MR-2035, was markedly less potent. Bremazocine increased urinary output in Long-Evans hooded and Sprague-Dawley albino rats as well as lean and fatty Zucker rats. In the lean Zucker and the albino rats, bremazocine produced an inverted U-shaped diuretic dose-effect curve, an effect characteristic of kappa agonists with mu agonist activity. This pattern was not seen with the fatty Zucker rats or the Long-Evans hooded rats. The full kappa agonists bremazocine, ethylketazocine and U-50,488 increased urinary output under three different conditions of hydration: water loaded, normal hydration and water deprived. In contrast, the partial kappa agonists reliably only increase urinary output under the normal hydration condition. The diuretic effects of full and partial kappa agonists correlated with plasma vasopressin levels in water-deprived rats. The full kappa agonists (ethylketazocine, U-50,488, tifluadom and MR-2034) suppressed plasma vasopressin levels below the threshold of detectability of the radioimmunoassay, whereas the partial kappa agonists (nalorphine and butorphanol) suppressed vasopressin levels compared with control values but did not have the efficacy of the full kappa agonists. All these results support the hypothesis that kappa agonists produce their diuretic effect by suppression of plasma vasopressin levels.
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PMID:Kappa agonist-induced diuresis: evidence for stereoselectivity, strain differences, independence of hydration variables and a result of decreased plasma vasopressin levels. 303 12

Kappa opioid agonists may produce dissimilar discriminative and analgesic effects in female vs. male subjects. The present study was conducted to determine whether a prototypic physiological effect of kappa agonists--diuresis--also differs between the sexes. When data were not corrected for individual differences in body weight, the kappa agonists U69,593 (0.03-3.0 mg/kg), U50,488 (0.3-10 mg/kg), (-)-bremazocine (0.001-0.1 mg/kg) and (-)-pentazocine (1-10 mg/kg), as well as a nonopioid diuretic, furosemide (1-10 mg/kg) produced significantly greater diuresis in normally hydrated, age-matched males than females; however, there was no sex difference in the diuretic effect of butorphanol (0.3-3.0 mg/kg), or in the antidiuretic effect of the mu agonist morphine (1.0-5.6 mg/kg, in water-loaded rats). In contrast, when data were corrected for individual difference in body weight, U69,593, U50,488, (-)-bremazocine, (-)-pentazocine, and furosemide produced nearly equivalent diuresis/kg in females and males, whereas butorphanol produced slightly greater diuresis/kg, and morphine produced significantly less antidiuresis/kg, in females than males. U69,593-induced diuresis was highly similar in males and females of similar body weight (i.e., different ages). U69,593 effects were dose-dependently antagonized by the kappa antagonist nor-binaltorphimine in both sexes, indicating a common, kappa receptor-mediated mechanism of action. (-)-Bremazocine was slightly more potent in suppressing vasopressin in 24-h water-deprived males than females. These results suggest that the greater diuretic effects of kappa receptor-selective opioid agonists in male rats are primarily due to males' larger body size (greater body water) relative to age-matched females, but may also be attributed to slightly greater vasopressin suppression in males.
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PMID:Kappa opioid-induced diuresis in female vs. male rats. 1063 36