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)

Nitric oxide derived from vascular endothelium is a potent vasodilator that plays a key role in the homeostasis of blood pressure. Because cirrhotic patients tend to have low arterial pressure, we measured in 51 patients and 10 control subjects serum nitrite and nitrate levels as an index of in vivo nitric oxide generation. We also measured plasma endotoxin, a substance frequently increased in cirrhotic patients and known to induce nitric oxide synthesis. Cirrhotic patients showed significant increases in serum nitrite/nitrate and plasma endotoxin compared with controls. Values were particularly increased in patients with decompensated cirrhosis, as manifested by ascites with or without functional kidney failure. High serum nitrite/nitrate levels were associated with high plasma renin activity, high aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone levels and low urinary excretion of sodium. In addition, serum nitrite/nitrate levels significantly correlated with endotoxemia. Oral administration of colistin to 15 cirrhotic patients reduced significantly plasma endotoxin levels (p < 0.01) and serum nitrite/nitrate levels (p < 0.05). Because endotoxin enhances the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase, our results suggest that circulating endotoxin in cirrhosis is responsible for excessive synthesis and release of nitric oxide by the vasculature. These findings might explain the hemodynamic dysfunction seen in cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:Increased serum nitrite and nitrate levels in patients with cirrhosis: relationship to endotoxemia. 822 20

1. Male (350-450 g) Long Evans rats were chronically instrumented to permit regional haemodynamics to be monitored in the conscious state. In the first experiment, either saline (0.4 ml h-1) or dexamethasone (3 mg kg-1, 125 micrograms kg-1 h-1) was infused continuously for 24 h, before co-infusion of lipopolysaccharide of (LPS, 150 micrograms kg-1 h-1) for 24 h. Dexamethasone prevented the delayed (5-24 h) fall in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and the renal and hindquarters vasodilatation seen with LPS infusion alone, but not the initial (about 2 h) fall in MAP or renal vasodilatation. However, at this dose, dexamethasone itself caused a significant rise in MAP and regional vasoconstrictions. 2. In the second experiment, dexamethasone at a lower dose (12.5 micrograms kg-1 h-1) had only slight pressor and vasoconstrictor effects. However, in its presence, infusion of LPS caused a substantial and progressive rise in MAP (maximum at 8 h, +32 +/- 3 mmHg) together with persistent mesenteric and hindquarters vasoconstriction and a transient renal vasodilatation. 3. In the third experiment, the non-selective endothelin antagonist, SB 209670 (600 micrograms kg-1 h-1), blocked the slight pressor and regional vasoconstrictor effects of the lower dose of dexamethasone. Furthermore, in the presence of dexamethasone and SB 209670, infusion of LPS caused marked, but transient hypotension (nadir at 5 h, -24 +/- 2 mmHg) and renal and mesenteric vasodilatation. 4. At the end of all experimental protocols, sequential administration of the AT1-receptor antagonist, losartan, followed by the V1-receptor antagonist, (+)-(CH2)5-O-Me-Tyr, vasopressin, caused effects indicating a variable involvement of angiotensin and vasopressin in the maintenance of cardiovascular status. 5. Collectively, the results indicate that, in the conscious rat, dexamethasone interacts with vasoconstrictor and vasodilator mechanisms, and hence its influence on the haemodynamic responses to LPS cannot be attributed, simply, to inhibition of the activity of inducible nitric oxide synthase and/or cyclo-oxygenase-2.
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PMID:Effects of dexamethasone and SB 209670 on the regional haemodynamic responses to lipopolysaccharide in conscious rats. 873 87

1. We compared the regional haemodynamic responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 150 micrograms kg-1 h-1, i.v.) in the presence of saline, aminoguanidine (AG; 45 mg kg-1 bolus, 45 mg kg-1 h-1 infusion), or AG and the non-selective endothelin receptor antagonist, SB 209670 (600 micrograms kg-1 h-1), in conscious, chronically instrumented, Long Evans rats (350-450 g; n = 8 in all groups). We used AG because there is evidence that it is a selective inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), although recently it has been claimed AG also inhibits constitutive NOS. 2. Infusion of LPS in the presence of saline caused an early, transient hypotension (1-2 h) and a renal vasodilatation, with a secondary, delayed fall in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), progressive tachycardia, and renal and hindquarters vasodilatation. 3. AG alone caused a rapid (within 30 s) transient rise in MAP (delta 27 +/- 3 mmHg), accompanied by tachycardia and regional vasoconstrictions, but no reduction in regional flows, indicating the pressor effect of AG was, probably, largely due to an increase in cardiac output. These effects are not consistent with AG inhibiting constitutive NOS. In the presence of AG, LPS still caused an early, transient fall in MAP accompanied by a renal vasodilatation, but thereafter there was a significant rise in MAP (17 +/- 3 mmHg, 3 h after onset of LPS infusion) accompanied by bradycardia and marked mesenteric and hindquarters vasoconstrictions. However, 23 h after the onset of co-infusion of AG and LPS all variables were not different from baseline, except heart rate and renal vascular conductance, which were increased. 4. In the presence of AG and SB 209670, LPS caused progressive hypotension and increases in renal, mesenteric and hindquarters vascular conductances. Hence, SB 209670 prevented the rise in MAP and the regional vasoconstrictions seen with AG and LPS, indicating an involvement of endothelin in these events. 5. In the presence of AG and SB 209670, 23 h after the onset of LPS infusion, the AT 1-receptor antagonist, losartan (10 mg kg-1), and the V 1-receptor antagonist, d(CH2)5-0-Me-Tyr-AVP (10 micrograms kg-1, 10 micrograms kg-1 h-1) caused additional incremental falls in MAP and increases in renal, mesenteric and hindquarters vascular conductances. Under these circumstances, MAP was lower and regional vascular conductances higher than in the other experiments following administration of losartan and d(CH2)5-0-Me-Tyr-AVP. Thus, although the findings are consistent with AG inhibiting iNOS, thereby revealing the pressor and vasoconstrictor actions of endothelin released by LPS, it is clear that LPS activates a very powerful hypotensive/vasodilator mechanism(s) which is resistant to AG, and whose full influence is only unmasked when the actions of endothelin, angiotensin II and vasopressin are inhibited.
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PMID:Influence of aminoguanidine and the endothelin antagonist, SB 209670, on the regional haemodynamic effects of endotoxaemia in conscious rats. 884 49

The role played by nitric oxide (NO) and carbon monoxide (CO) was explored in the adult male rat by determining whether antagonizing the activity of the enzymes responsible for the formation of these gases altered the response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis to immune (cytokines) or nonimmune (mild electroshocks) signals. The arginine derivative Nomeganitro-L-arginine-methylester (L-NAME), which inhibits all three NO synthase (NOS) isoforms [inducible (i), endothelial (e) and neuronal (n)] significantly augments the ACTH response to blood-borne cytokines, but decreases it in rats exposed to shocks or other physico-emotional stresses. The effect of L-NAME in both models is mimicked by L-nitroarginine (L-NNA) and L-nitromethylarginine (L-NMMA), which block constitutive (e and n) forms of NOS, but not by aminoguanidine (which blocks iNOS) or 7-nitroindazole (which specifically blocks nNOS). Despite the ability of L-NAME to markedly augment the stimulatory effect of vasopressin on ACTH secretion, removal of this peptide does not interfere with the interaction between L-NAME and systemically administered interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta). In contrast, blockade of prostaglandin formation prevents both the stimulatory effect of IL-1beta on ACTH release, and its potentiation by L-NAME. In contrast to the investigation of the importance of endogenous NO, studies focused on the role of CO remain scarce. Our preliminary results suggest that while blockade of the formation of this gas decreases the ACTH response to various stimuli, it also significantly interferes with the effect of L-NAME in rats systemically administered cytokines, and further decreases the ACTH response to shocks in animals also injected with arginine analogs. These results indicate the possible presence of functional interactions between NO and CO in regulating the activity of the HPA axis. Our present working hypothesis is that in the presence of elevated circulating cytokine levels, endogenous NO acts presynaptically to inhibit the release of ACTH secretagogues from nerve terminals in the infundibulum. As the acute ACTH response to these immune proteins is believed to primarily depend on events taking place within the median eminence, blockade of NO formation results in exaggerated ACTH release. During exposure to shocks and other nonimmune stresses, on the other hand, increased ACTH secretion is primarily due to activation of hypothalamic neurons. In this case, because of the stimulatory influence of endogenous NO on hypothalamic perikarya that manufacture corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and/or of the afferents to these neurons, blockade of NOS activity blunts CRF production, and consequently ACTH release. What remains undetermined is the net effect of the opposite influences of NO during long-term exposure to immune or nonimmune stress. Finally, it is possible that the conflicting results reported by investigators who study the role of NO and CO in isolated cell preparations may reflect, at least in part, these opposite effects of NO on different elements of the HPA axis.
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PMID:Role of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide in modulating the ACTH response to immune and nonimmune signals. 973 Jun 87

1. Hyposensitivity to vasopressin is a well-documented phenomenon in animals with portal hypertension and patients with cirrhosis subjected to haemorrhage. Excessive formation of nitric oxide is at least partly responsible for the vascular hyporesponsiveness to vasoconstrictors observed in experimental portal hypertension or in rats with haemorrhagic shock. This study investigated whether addition of aminoguanidine, a preferential inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, to glypressin (a long-acting vasopressin analogue) could enhance its portal hypotensive effect in portal-hypertensive rats with bleeding.2. Portal hypertension was induced by partial portal vein ligation. Fourteen days after operation, systemic and portal haemodynamics were measured in stable or bleeding portal vein-ligated rats receiving intravenous glypressin (0.07 mg/kg) or aminoguanidine (70 mg/kg) followed by glypressin infusion. In rats with a hypotensive haemorrhage, 4.5 ml of blood was withdrawn and 50% of the withdrawn blood was reinfused before the administration of glypressin or aminoguanidine.3. Glypressin resulted in a significantly greater decrease in portal pressure in portal vein-ligated rats without bleeding than in those with bleeding (P<0.001). In contrast, glypressin induced similar changes in mean arterial pressure between the two groups (P>0.05). The addition of aminoguanidine significantly potentiated the portal-hypotensive effect of glypressin in bleeding portal vein-ligated rats (P<0.005) without an effect on the changes in mean arterial pressure induced by glypressin infusion (P>0.05).4. Splanchnic hyposensitivity to glypressin exists in a haemorrhage-transfused rat model of portal hypertension. This hyposensitivity can be ameliorated by the administration of aminoguanidine.
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PMID:Aminoguanidine ameliorates splanchnic hyposensitivity to glypressin in a haemorrhage-transfused rat model of portal hypertension. 979 Oct 50

We examined the functional role of nitric oxide (NO) and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) isoforms in the pulmonary dysfunction seen in cirrhosis. Lungs were isolated from control and carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4))-induced cirrhotic rats and perfused at constant flow with a whole blood mixture. Ventilation with hypoxic gas resulted in attenuated hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) in lungs from cirrhotic animals. Administration of the non-selective NOS inhibitor N-omega-Nitro-L-Arginine (L-NNA) resulted in HPV responses that were not different between groups. However, inhibition of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) did not restore cirrhotic HPV responses. Lungs from cirrhotic rats demonstrated enhanced endothelial-dependent vasodilation to vasopressin when preconstricted with hypoxia but not when preconstricted with thromboxane mimetic. Western blot analysis failed to demonstrate differences in pulmonary endothelial NOS (eNOS) or iNOS levels between groups. Our data suggest that, while NO may play a role in mediating the reduced pulmonary vasoreactivity observed in cirrhosis, other vasoactive factors are likely also important modulators of the pulmonary dysfunction seen in this disease.
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PMID:Role of nitric oxide (NO) in pulmonary dysfunction associated with experimental cirrhosis. 1131 11

In cirrhosis, lipopolysaccharide (LPS, a product of Gram-negative bacteria) in the blood may cause septic shock. LPS-elicited induction of arterial inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) results in nitric oxide (NO)-induced vasodilation, which causes arterial hypotension and hyporeactivity to alpha(1)-adrenergic constrictors. In vitro studies have suggested that vasopressin inhibits iNOS expression in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells exposed to LPS. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of terlipressin administration (a vasopressin analog) on in vivo LPS-induced aortic iNOS in rats with cirrhosis. LPS (1 mg/kg, intravenously) was administered followed by the intravenous administration of terlipressin (0.05 mg/kg, intravenously) or placebo 1 hour later. Arterial pressure was measured, and contractions to phenylephrine (an alpha(1)-adrenoceptor agonist), iNOS activity, and iNOS expressions (mRNA and protein) were investigated in isolated aortas. LPS-induced arterial hypotension and aortic hyporeactivity to phenylephrine were abolished in rats that received terlipressin. LPS-induced aortic iNOS activity and expression were suppressed in terlipressin-treated rats. In conclusion, in LPS-challenged rats with cirrhosis, terlipressin administration inhibits in vivo LPS-induced aortic iNOS expression. Terlipressin administration may be a novel approach for the treatment of arterial hypotension and hyporeactivity to alpha(1)-adrenergic constrictors in patients with cirrhosis and septic shock.
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PMID:Terlipressin inhibits in vivo aortic iNOS expression induced by lipopolysaccharide in rats with biliary cirrhosis. 1239 16

The effects of neuronal, endothelial, or inducible nitric oxide synthase gene disruption on the expression of oxytocin and vasopressin gene were examined in the hypothalamus (paraventricular, supraoptic, suprachiasmatic, and anterior commissural nuclei) and extrahypothalamus (bed nucleus of the stria terminalis). The oxytocin messenger RNA levels in the anterior commissural nucleus of neuronal nitric oxide synthase knockout mice were significantly higher than in control mice, but not in endothelial or inducible nitric oxide synthase knockout mice. In contrast, no significant effects of neuronal, endothelial, or inducible nitric oxide synthase gene disruption on oxytocin and vasopressin messenger RNA levels in the other hypothalamic and extrahypothalamic nuclei were observed. These results suggest that neuronal nitric-oxide-synthase-derived nitric oxide may be involved in the regulation of oxytocin gene expression in the anterior commissural nucleus.
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PMID:Effects of nitric oxide synthase isoform deletion on oxytocin and vasopressin messenger RNA in mouse hypothalamus. 1572 48

We tested the hypothesis that nitric oxide (NO) arising from the action of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is responsible for the deficiency in vasopressin (AVP) release and consequent hypotension during endotoxaemic shock. Wild-type (WT) and iNOS knockout mice (iNOS(-/-)) were given either saline or Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 1.0 mg/kg i.v., final volume 0.03 ml). Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) was measured and plasma AVP levels determined before and after LPS or saline injection. In WT mice, MAP was significantly lower 2 h after LPS administration and remained low for the remainder of the 6-h observation period. AVP plasma levels were increased at the 2nd and 4th h of the experiment, returning thereafter to basal levels. Conversely, LPS injection in iNOS iNOS(-/-) mice elicited a sustained increase in plasma AVP concentration and attenuated the fall in blood pressure. These data indicate that NO arising from the iNOS plays an important inhibitory role in AVP release during endotoxaemia and may be responsible for the hypotension occurring during this vasodilatory shock.
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PMID:Vasopressin release during endotoxaemic shock in mice lacking inducible nitric oxide synthase. 1597 Oct 84

We investigated the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta) and nicotine induced hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) responses, and a possible significance of CRH and vasopressin in these responses under basal and social stress conditions. Male Wistar rats were crowded in cages for 7 days prior to treatment. All compounds were injected i.p., nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitors, alpha-helical CRH antagonist and vasopressin receptor antagonist 15 min before IL-1beta or nicotine. Identical treatment received control non-stressed rats. Plasma ACTH and serum corticosterone levels were measured 1 h after IL-1beta or nicotine injection. L-NAME (2 mg/kg), a general nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor, considerably reduced the ACTH and corticosterone response to IL-1beta (0.5 microg/rat) the same extent in control and crowded rats. CRH antagonist almost abolished the nicotine-induced hormone responses and vasopressin antagonist reduced ACTH secretion. Constitutive endothelial eNOS and neuronal nNOS inhibitors substantially enhanced the nicotine-elicited ACTH and corticosterone response and inducible iNOS inhibitor, aminoguanidine, did not affect these responses in non-stressed rats. Social stress significantly attenuated the nicotine-induced ACTH and corticosterone response. In crowded rats L-NAME significantly deepened the stress-induced decrease in the nicotine-evoked ACTH and corticosterone response. In stressed rats neuronal NOS antagonist did not alter the nicotine-evoked hormone responses and inducible NOS inhibitor partly reversed the stress-induced decrease in ACTH response to nicotine. These results indicate that NO plays crucial role in the IL-1beta-induced HPA axis stimulation under basal and social stress conditions. CRH and vasopressin of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus may be involved in the nicotine induced alterations of HPA axis activity. NO generated by eNOS, but not nNOS, is involved in the stress-induced alterations of HPA axis activity by nicotine.
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PMID:Nitric oxide mediates the interleukin-1beta- and nicotine-induced hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical response during social stress. 1620 70


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