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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. A 25% faecal suspension in
sodium chloride
solution, incubated anaerobically at 37 degrees C for 48 h, showed excellent survival of all the main groups of faecal bacteria. 2. All faecal incubation systems studied generated large amounts of ammonia, particularly those in which bacterial counts fell during incubation. As normal faeces contain negligible amounts of urea this ammonia must have been generated from sources other than urea. 3. Ammonia was also generated by faeces delivered by
sodium chloride
enema, and by ileostomy fluid, indicating that the phenomenon is not confined to distal colonic contents. 4. Ammonia generation by incubated faeces was inhibited by prior autoclaving of the sample, but not by sterilization with gamma-irradiation. 5. Generation of ammonia by incubated stool was accompanied by release of large amounts of organic anion and a fall in pH. 6. These observations are interpreted as evidence that ammonia generated within the colon in situ is not derived exclusively from urea, but also from bacterial deamination of amino acids, peptides and proteins. Simultaneously bacterial activity generates large amounts of organacid. The presence of living bacteria is not essential for ammonia generation, provided that bacterial enzymes are present. 7. Bacterial generation of organic solute in faeces which have left the body is sufficiently rapid to cast serious doubts on the validity of faecal centrifugation, or other time-consuming techniques involving lengthy handling of faeces, as methods of obtaining extracellular faecal fluid for measurements of organic constituents or ammonia.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1976 Sep
PMID:Generation of ammonia from non-urea sources in a faecal incubation system. 0 21
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.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Oct
PMID:Circulating inhibitor of sodium-potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase after expansion of extracellular fluid volume in rats. 14 41
1. Human gastrointestinal secretions formed soluble copper complexes when labelled in vitro with 64Cu. 2. Copper-binding substances of low molecular weight were demonstrated in the saliva, gastric juice and secretin-stimulated duodenal aspirate of nomal subjects by dialysis and gel-chromatography studies. 3. The nature of the copper complexes formed by secretions obtained from patients with Wilson's disease was similar to that oc complexes formed by secretions of normal subjects. 4. Bile contained a copper-binding fraction of high molecular weight which was more concentrated in gall-bladder than hepatic bile. Between pH 5 and pH 8, this component had a greater binding affinity EDTA at a concentration of 10 mmol/1. 5. Absorption of 64Cu from 64Cu-labelled saliva, gastric juice or L-histidine solution (100 mmol/1) administered intraduodenally into groups of rats was similar to that observed in a control series given [Cu]cupric acetate in
sodium chloride
solution. In contrast, the absorption of 64Cu from labelled hepatic and gall-bladder bile was significantly reduced. 6. The results suggest that dietary copper forms soluble complexes with the alimentary secretions and that these complexes influence absorption of the metal according to their molecular size. The net uptake of ingested copper from the gut lumen ms, low-molecular-weight ligands in the alimentary secretions and a macromolecular copper-binding complex of bile.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1975 Sep
PMID:Studies on the nature of complexes formed by copper with human alimentary secretions and their influence on copper absorption in the rat. 24 May 30
1. Salt depletion was produced in five dogs by a low salt diet and daily administration of frusemide for 5 days; a control group of five dogs was placed on the same diet, to which 2.5 g of
sodium chloride
was added. 2. Saralasin infusion (0.5 microgram min-1 kg-1) reduced mean aortic blood pressure and total peripheral vascular resistance and increased cardiac output in salt-depleted dogs, but did not affect the heart rate and left ventricular dP/dt. 3. Saralasin infusion increased mean aortic blood pressure slightly in normal dogs; other systemic haemodynamic parameters did not change significantly. 4. Saralasin decreased hepatic arterial flow in both normal and salt-depleted dogs, but increased blood flow to left ventricle and kidneys only in salt-depleted dogs. 5. These results suggest that saralasin exerts a partial agonist effect in normal dogs to increase arterial blood pressure, but causes a depressor response during salt depletion because it reverses the vasoconstrictor effect of angiotensin II, particularly on the renal and coronary circulations.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med Suppl 1978 Dec
PMID:Redistribution of regional blood flow after administration of saralasin in salt-depleted dogs. 28 61
1. The effect of oral administration of an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthetase, indomethacin, on the natriuresis induced by the infusion of
sodium chloride
(saline) was studied in 11 healthy volunteers. 2. The administration of indomethacin did not alter sodium excretion before saline infusion, but it resulted in a significant increase of the natriuresis after saline infusion. This increase was not accompanied by any change in post-infusion urine flow rate or free water reabsorption. 3. It is suggested that intrarenal prostaglandins might suppress the natriuretic effect of saline infusion, probably by increasing sodium reabsorption in the distal nephron.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Jan
PMID:Effect of inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis on the natriuresis induced by saline infusion in man. 41 87
1. We have examined the response of renin to chronic low and high
sodium chloride
intake in rats with transplanted phaeochromocytoma. 2. Phaeochromocytoma suppressed the usual elevated plasma renin activity observed during sodium deprivation. 3. Studies in isolated perfused kidneys indicated that sodium-deprived phaeochromocytoma rats released substantially less renin than sodium-deprived control rats despite an almost identical renal renin content in both sets of animals. In addition, low perfusion pressure (50 mmHg) failed to stimulate renin release in kidneys from these phaeochromocytoma rats. 4. Additional experiments demonstrated that chronic
sodium chloride
loading suppressed plasma renin activity, renin content and renin release in both phaeochromocytoma and control rats. Both sodium-loaded phaeochromocytoma and sodium-loaded control rats were unresponsive to low perfusion pressure. 5. We conclude that noradrenaline-secreting phaeochromocytoma impairs the response of plasma renin activity in the rat by inhibiting renin release. We also conclude that chronic
sodium chloride
loading has a similar effect, but the mechanisms remain to be determined.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Nov
PMID:Decreased plasma renin activity and renin release in rats with phaeochromocytoma. 58 29
1. Patients with sickle-cell anaemia were unable to increase free water reabsorption (TcH2O) in response to intravenous hypertonic
sodium chloride
solution. 2. Ethacrynic acid caused a brisk natriuresis in patients with sickle-cell anaemia but fractional sodium excretion was lower in these patients. 3. These findings could be explained by abnormal function of the loop of Henle.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Dec
PMID:Excretion of salt and water by patients with sickle-cell anaemia: effect of a diuretic and solute diuresis. 58 37
1. The effect of intravenous loading with 500 ml of
sodium chloride
solution (50 g/l) on plasma renin concentration, plasma aldosterone concentration, urinary sodium excretion and mean blood pressure was studied in 15 young patients with mild essential hypertension and 10 healthy normotensive control subjects. 2. Plasma renin concentration and plasma aldosterone concentration were suppressed to the same degree during loading in both the hypertensive and normotensive groups. Urinary sodium excretion was significantly higher in the hypertensive patients than in the normotensive subjects. Mean blood pressure increased slightly in both groups. 3. Plasma renin concentration and plasma aldosterone concentration were significantly correlated in both groups before sodium loading. The increase in urinary sodium excretion was significantly correlated to the suppression of plasma aldosterone concentration in the hypertensive, but not in the normotensive, group. No correlation was found between changes in urinary sodium excretion and changes in plasma renin concentration or mean blood pressure. 4. The results indicate that the suppressibility of the renin-aldosterone system by hyperosmotic
sodium chloride
solution is normal in young patients with mild essential hypertension. It is suggested that the changes in plasma aldosterone concentration induced by sodium loading might be involved in the regulation of exaggerated natriuresis in essential hypertension.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Dec
PMID:The renin-aldosterone system in exaggerated natriuresis of essential hypertension. 58 41
1. The mechanism of the antidiuretic effect of hydrochlorothiazide in diabetes insipidus was studied in anaesthetized Brattleboro rats with the hereditary hypothalamic form of the disease. 2. The antidiuresis caused by acute administration of hydrochlorothiazide followed an increase in sodium excretion and was associated with a significant fall in the plasma sodium concentration. There were concomitant falls in effective renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate. 3. When sodium depletion was prevented by adjusting the infusion of
sodium chloride
, the falls in plasma sodium concentration, effective renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate were abolished. Under these circumstances there was an increase in urine volume, which suggests that hydrochlorothiazide may inhibit fractional fluid reabsorption in the proximal convoluted tubule. 4. The results indicate that the antidiuresis caused by hydrochlorothiazide in diabetes insipidus results, at least in part, from falls in effective renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate. These in turn seem to be entirely secondary to the drug-induced sodium depletion.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Mar
PMID:The role of sodium depletion in hydrochlorothiazide-induced antidiuresis in Brattleboro rats with diabetes insipidus. 63 Jul 97
1. The effect of extracellular volume expansion (ECVE) during water diuresis, and of water diuresis alone, on the formation of free water in man was compared. 2. ECVE reduced free water formation at any given rate of distal delivery compared with water diuresis. Thus, ECVE depresses distal
sodium chloride
reabsorption. 3. This attenuation of free water formation occurred both when urine flow (V/100 ml glomerular filtration rate) and distal chloride delivery [(Cwater + Ccl)/100 ml glomerular filtration rate] were used as the terms for distal delivery. 4. We suggest that the distal depression of
sodium chloride
reabsorption after ECVE is robably due to a direct inhibition of distal
sodium chloride
transport mechanisms, and not to the flooding of the diluting site by the poorly reabsorbable bicarbonate ion.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Mar
PMID:The effect of acute extracellular volume expansion on sodium chloride reabsorption in the diluting segment in man. 63 Aug 10
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