Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The rate of renal excretion of arginine-vasopressin was determined during unrestricted fluid intake for 24 h and in response to fluid deprivation for 18 h in nine young men with very mild essential hypertension and compared with that in sixteen normotensive men of similar age. 2. Despite an equivalent osmolar stimulus, excretion of arginine-vasopressin was significantly greater in the reference group than in the reference group. This difference increased progressively with increasing dehydration. 3. We suggest that these findings are mainly due to an increased rate of secretion of arginine-vasopressin in response to mild hydropenia in hypertensive patients and that a moderate increase of release of arginine-vasopressin during periods of fluid deprivation may exert vascular effects and thus influence the perpetuation of hypertension.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Increased renal excretion of arginine-vasopressin during mild hydropenia in young men with mild essential benign hypertension. 107 11

1. Healthy subjects, given a long-acting preparation of vasopressin intramuscularly, excreted a significantly less concentrated urine than when subjected to fluid deprivation for 28 h. 2. When fludrocortisone, a potent mineralocorticoid, was given in addition to vasopressin the urine was not significantly less concentrated than after fluid deprivation. 3. Oral urea-loading also enhanced the urine-concentrating power of vasopressin but its effect was less marked than that of fludrocortisone. Oral urea did not increase further the urine concentration achieved by combined fludrocortisone and vasopressin. 4. Renal concentrating power was assessed in fourteen patients with renal disease and impaired concentrating ability. Fludrocortisone significantly enhanced the urine concentration achieved by vasopressin alone and the resultant urine was not significantly less concentrated than that achieved by fluid deprivation. 5. The action of fludrocortisone in enhancing the urine-concentrating effect of vasopressin is similar to that of aldosterone and is probably due to the increased sequestration of solute in the renal medulla, caused by increased reabsorption of sodium chloride in the ascending limb of the loop of Henle. 6. In the clinical assessment of renal concentrating power, the combined use of fludrocortisone and vasopressin has potential advantages over established methods.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Apr
PMID:Assessment of urine-concentrating ability in man: effect of fludrocortisone and urea in enhancing response to vasopressin. 112 20

1. The effect of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) on isoprenaline-stimulated renin secretion was examined in the isolated rat kidney perfused with modified Krebs-Ringer saline. 2. Intrarenal infusion OF ADH effectively prevented stimulation of renin secretion by isoprenaline whilst increasing renal perfusion pressure. 3. The exclusion of calcium ions from the perfusion medium abolished the vasoconstrictor effect of ADH and attenuated the inhibitory effect of ADH on isoprenaline-stimulated renin secretion. However, significant suppression of renin secretion was still apparent compared with experiments where isoprenaline was infused alone. 4. These observations indicate that ADH inhibits renin secretion and that this is effected by a direct action on the kidney. Although this may be partly mediated by the rise in renal perfusion pressure, an additional direct effect of ADH on the renin-producing cell, which is dependent on the availability of calcium ions, is proposed.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Jul
PMID:Inhibition of renin secretion in the isolated rat kidney by antidiuretic hormone. 114 97

Two series of neurohypophysial peptide amino-acylated derivatives were tested for their ability to activate plasma membrane adenylate cyclase prepared from pig or rat kidney. They were firstly [8-lysine]-vasopressin-related derivatives (Na-[Glycyl-Cys]1-[8-Lysine]-vasopressin and Na-[Glycyl-Glycyl-Cys51-[8-Lysine]-vasopressin) and secondly oxytocin-related derivatives (Na-[Glycyl-Cys-a1)-oxytocin, Na-[Leucyl-Glycyl-Glycyl--Cys]-oxytocin, and Na-[Glycyl-Cys]-[2-0methyl tyrosine]-oxtocin). The maximal adenylate cyclase activation induced by these peptides was lower than that induced by their respective parent hormones. After incubation of these analogues with plasma membranes obtained from the renal medulla, no significant release of parent hormones occurred. Good qualitative correlations were observed between relative antidiuretic activities measured in vivo and relative potencies in activating adenylate cyclase. It was concluded that direct action of peptides tested on the kidney is at least partly responsible for their antidiuretic activity in vivo.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1975 Jan
PMID:Renal adenylate cyclase activation by amino acylated vasopressin and oxytocin. 114 16

Vasopressin analogues with enhanced antidiuretic activity in vivo (deamino-[D-arg8]-vasopressin, deamino-6-carba-[Orn8]-vasopressin, deamino-6-carba-[Arg8]-vasopressin, and deamino-6-carba-[D-Arg8]-vasopressin) were tested for their ability to activate rat renal medullary adenylate cyclase and compared to the natural antidiuretic hormones [Arg8]- and [Lys8]-vasopressin. The enzyme preparation used did not inactivate the vasopressins or the analogues tested. The analogues activated adenylate cyclase. However, several of them were far less effective than expected on the basis of their very high in vivo antidiuretic activity. It was concluded that the enhanced in vivo activity reflects greater metabolic stability in vivo rather than enhanced affinity for the renal antidiuretic hormone receptor.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1975 Jan
PMID:Activation of rat kidney adenylate cyclase by vasopressin analogues: lack of correlation with antidiuretic activity. 114 17

1. The interrelationship between parasympathetic neural tone, renin secretion and vasopressin release was examined by observing the effect of bilateral cervical vagotomy on renin secretion in intact and acutely hypophysectomized dogs undergoing a water diuresis. 2. In intact dogs bilateral cervical vagotomy decreased the mean renin secretion from 1245 to 682 units/min (P less than 0.01) as urinary osmolality increased from 95 to 414 mosmol/kg (P less than 0.001). In contrast, in acutely hypophysectomized dogs cervical vagotomy failed to alter renin secretion significantly (834 to 893 units/min) and urinary osmolality was also unchanged (78 to 71 mosmol/kg). 3. The results suggest that a diminution in vagal tone may significantly alter renin secretion by stimulating vasopressin release. Exogenous vasopressin was associated with changes in urinary osmolality and renin secretion which were qualitatively similar to those seen after servical vagotomy. 4. We suggest that there is a neurohumoral reflex mechanism by which a fall in parasympathetic tone increases the release of vasopressin, which, in turn, suppresses renin secretion. The results are also compatible with the hypothesis that vasopressin inhibits renin release by a direct effect on the juxtaglomerular cells.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Feb
PMID:Parasympathetic pathways, renin secretion and vasopressin release. 116 20

1. Chlorpropamide, carbamazepine and clofibrate have an antidiuretic action in patients with neurohypophyseal diabetes insipidus which is qualitatively similar to that of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). 2. An additive antidiuretic effect is produced by combination of chlorpropamide and carbamazepine with small dosages of ADH. 3. After an immediate and transient antidiuresis, a single intravenous bolus injection of lysine vasopressin given during treatment with chlorpropamide, chlorpropamide with a continuous intravenous infusion of lysine vasopressin, carbamazepine or clofibrate, resulted in increased water diuresis for 12-24 h or longer. 4. This paradoxical diuresis was not observed during treatment with chlorothiazide. 5. It is suggested that the antidiuretic action of chlorpropamide, carbamazepine and clofibrate is localized at the receptor site for ADH in the distal renal tubular cell.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Oct
PMID:Paradoxical diuresis after vasopressin administration to patients with neurohypophyseal diabetes insipidus treated with chlorpropamide, carbamazepine or clofibrate. 119 87

1. In order to study the effect of overhydration on body potassium, experiments were performed on pair-fed rabbits, one of which was maintained continuously on vasopressin and given extra water (60-90 ml day-1 kg-1) for 6-8 days, while the other served as control. 2. Overhydrated rabbits excreted significantly more potassium (53%) in their urine than control rabbits and accumulated a mean potassium deficit of 65-0 mmol, significantly higher than the mean value of 37-1 mmol in the control rabbits. 3. In the overhydrated rabbits, potassium fell significantly in both erythrocytes, from 266 to 173 mmol/kg of dry cells, and also in muscle, from 435 to 341 mmol/kg of fat-free dry solids. Neither changed significantly in the control animals. 4. Overhydration in the presence of vasopressin leads to potassium depletion in the rabbit and a similar phenomenon might be expected in man. Potassium depletion due to overhydration might account for the hypokalaemia and reduction in exchangeable potassium observed in some patients with the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Dec
PMID:Potassium depletion induced by vasopressin and overhydration in the rabbit. 120 83

1. The effects of unilateral nephrectomy on urinary concentration and dilution were studied in Sprague-Dawley rats. To exclude incomplete suppression of antidiuretic hormone, free water formation was also sutdied in rats with congenital diabetes insipidus (Brattleboro strain). 2. Urinary solute-free water formation was similar in Sprague-Dawley and Brattleboro rats. Uninephrectomized animals excreted a water load promptly and diluted their urine to the same degree as control rats. Maximal values for Cwater and TCwater per kidney were higher after nephrectomy, but were similar to those of control rats at comparable rates of fluid delivery to the distal nephron. Renal tissue osmolaity was similar in uninephrectomized and sham-operated animals, indicating that nonantidiuretic hormone-dependent backflux of filtrate was the same in the two groups. The only defect observed in uninephrectomized animals was a small reduction in maximal urine osmolaity. 3. These results demonstrate that free water formation and reabsorption are unaffected by unilateral nephrectomy and suggest that, in the remaining kidney, filtrate reabsorption along the entire nephron increases in proportion to the increment in glomerular filtration.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Dec
PMID:Urinary concentration and dilution after unilateral nephrectomy in the rat. 120 87

1. A patient with polyuria in whom diabetes insipidus had been diagnosed was treated with Pitressin. Resistance to this therapy developed after 18 months and a circulating antibody to vasopressin was then demonstrated. Withdrawal of therapy led to a fall in titre of the antibody and an increase in maximal urinary concentration. 2. The antibody to vasopressin was associated with the IgA fraction of the serum immunoglobulins and its characteristics are described.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1976 Apr
PMID:Polyuria associated with an antibody to vasopressin. 126 Dec 9


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