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Query: UNIPROT:P41181 (
collecting duct
)
5,183
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Arginine vasopressin is the main hormone involved in the regulation of body fluid osmolality. The hormone is released by the posterior pituitary whenever water deprivation causes an increased plasma osmolality or whenever the cardiovascular system is challenged by hypovolaemia and/or hypotension. The main site of action of this hormone is the renal
collecting duct
, but vasopressin is also a potent vasopressor and neurotransmitter, it has a role in the secretion of corticotrophin, in the regulation of the cardiovascular system, temperature and other visceral functions.
Vasopressin
also promotes the release of coagulation factors by vascular endothelium and increases platelet aggregability. In addition to its classical contractile effect on uterine myometrial and mammary glandular myoepithelial cells, oxytocin acts as neurotransmitter, stimulates endometrial prostaglandin production, pituitary prolactin secretion, luteolysis, sperm transport and natriuresis, and may play a role in immune function. Sensorial stimuli arising from the cervix and vagina as well as stimulation of the breast can induce secretion of oxytocin from the posterior pituitary. There are many vasopressin and oxytocin analogues (agonists and antagonists) that are synthetized with the goal of increasing duration of action and selectivity for the receptor subtypes, while non-peptide antagonists are orally active. The oxytocin and the vasopressin V1a, V1b and V2 receptors have recently been cloned and shown to form a sub-family within the large superfamily of G-protein-linked receptors. Renal V2 receptors mediate vasopressin-induced water reabsorption via induction of intracellular cAMP production in
collecting duct
cells. Most remaining actions of vasopressin on blood vessel constriction, liver glycogenolysis, platelet adhesion, adrenal angiotensin II secretion and certain brain functions are mediated via V1a-type receptors that are coupled to a Gq/11 protein. V1 receptor activation leads to stimulation of phospholipases C, D and A2, and an increase in intracellular calcium.
Vasopressin
stimulates pituitary corticotrophin release via a third vasopressin receptor type (V1b) which is present in corticotrophs. Oxytocin induces myometrial contraction, endometrial prostaglandin F2a production, mammary gland milk ejection, renal natriuresis and specific sexual, affilitative and maternal behaviours via oxytocin receptors which are also coupled to a G1/11 protein. Although only one oxytocin receptor type has been cloned so far, recent binding studies indicate that uterine endometrial oxytocin receptors may constitute a distinct receptor subtype. Expression of oxytocin receptors have relevant up- and down-regulation by oestrogens and progesterone.
...
PMID:[Hormones of the posterior region of the hypophyseal gland]. 986 66
Vasopressin
or AVP regulates water reabsorption by the kidney inner medullary
collecting duct
(IMCD) through the insertion and removal of aquaporin (AQP) 2 water channels into the IMCD apical membrane. AVP-elicited trafficking of AQP2 with the apical membrane occurs via a specialized population of vesicles that resemble synaptic vesicles in neurons. AQP2 vesicles and the IMCD apical membrane contain homologs of vesicle-targeting and signal transduction proteins found in neurons. Expression studies of AQP2, including human AQP2 mutants, suggest that the carboxyl-terminal domain of AQP2 is important in AQP2 trafficking, particularly as a site for cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation. These present data reveal that IMCD cells possess a complex integrated-signaling and vesicle-trafficking machinery that provides integration of AVP-elicited water transport with many other parameters within the IMCD cell as well as kidney.
...
PMID:Modulation of vasopressin-elicited water transport by trafficking of aquaporin2-containing vesicles. 1009 6
A significant increase in the water permeability was found in the rat outer medullary
collecting duct
(OMCD) cells in presence of 10-7M of vasopressin. The latter caused a decrease in the OMCD cell volume in isoosmotic medium in adult rats. In pups, the water permeability of the OMCD cells was very high.
Vasopressin
seems to be unable to decrease the cell volume of the OMCD cells in pups which suggests an immaturity of the cell transduction mechanism.
...
PMID:[Morphometric analysis of the effects of vasopressin in the rat kidney collecting tubules]. 1038 87
This study tested whether glucocorticoids regulate tubular urea transport. Urea permeability was measured in perfused inner medullary
collecting duct
(IMCD) subsegments from rats that underwent adrenalectomy, adrenalectomy plus replacement with a physiologic dose of glucocorticoid (dexamethasone), or sham operation. Compared with sham rats, basal urea permeability in terminal IMCD was significantly increased in adrenalectomized rats and reduced in dexamethasone-treated rats.
Vasopressin
significantly increased urea permeability in all three groups. In contrast, there was no difference in basal or vasopressin-stimulated urea permeability in initial IMCD between the three groups. Next, membrane and vesicle fraction proteins were isolated from inner medullary tip or base and Western analysis was performed by use of an antibody to the rat vasopressin-regulated urea transporter.
Vasopressin
-regulated urea transporter protein was significantly increased in both membrane and vesicle fractions from the inner medullary tip of adrenalectomized rats. There was no change in vasopressin-regulated urea transporter protein in the inner medullary base, and Northern analysis showed no change in urea transporter mRNA abundance in either inner medullary region. It was concluded that glucocorticoids can downregulate function and expression of the vasopressin-regulated urea transporter in rat terminal IMCD.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoids downregulate the vasopressin-regulated urea transporter in rat terminal inner medullary collecting ducts. 1049 79
The central and peripheral mechanisms regulate body water balance near an ideal set point. Osmosensitive neurons in the organum vasculosum lamina terminalis (OVLT) in the anterior hypothalamus play a key role in regulating vasopressin release and drinking behaviour. Patients with OVLT lesions are known to have osmostat fluctuations. Although the brain water channel is suggested to participate in osmoreception, the precise molecular mechanisms of osmoreception and thirst appreciation remain to be clarified.
Vasopressin
gene mutation is responsible for hereditary central diabetes insipidus. Mutant vasopressin precursors have been reported to impair the secretion of wild-type proteins or cause cellular toxicity. Despite the intact production and secretion of vasopressin, the kidney is unable to concentrate urine in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI). Most congenital NDI patients have mutations in the G protein-coupled vasopressin V2 receptor gene. V2 receptor mutants are shown not to reach the plasma membrane, not to bind AVP, and not to trigger an intracellular cyclic adenosine-monophosphate signal. Congenital NDI with an autosomal recessive inheritance has mutations of
Aquaporin-2
gene, a vasopressin-sensitive water channel in the renal inner medullary
collecting duct
(IMCD). Aquaporin-2 mutant proteins cannot be expressed at the luminal membrane. The corticopapillary osmotic gradient is necessary for renal sensitivity to vasopressin. The vasopressin-regulated urea transporter in IMCD and the chloride channel (CLC-K1) in the ascending loop of the Henle contribute to the formation of the osmotic gradient. NDI has been shown in mice lacking the CLC-K1. The pathophysiological significance of urea transporter and CLC-K1 has yet to be demonstrated in patients with NDI.
...
PMID:[Water metabolism and its disturbances]. 1063 21
In the current study, a novel role for the microfilaments in vasopressin-induced water transport in toad urinary bladders, a popular model for the mammalian
collecting duct
, was established.
Vasopressin
-induced water transport was not affected by cytochalasin D (CD, 20 microM) or latrunculin B (Lat B, 0.5-2 microM), microfilament-disrupting reagents, suggesting that the initial trafficking of vesicles containing water channels and insertion of membranes into the apical membrane are microfilament-independent. After the removal of vasopressin, bladders treated with CD or Lat B continued to transport water at least 2-3-fold greater than those that received the vehicle. Furthermore, the enhanced water transport was inhibited by HgCl2 (1 mM), a potent inhibitor of water channel-mediated water flow, suggesting that the enhanced water flow was through water channels. In addition, Lat B and CD inhibited vasopressin-induced endocytosis of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), a fluid endocytotic marker. These results suggested that although microfilaments are not needed for the initial trafficking of water channels to the apical side, the microfilament network is essential for the retrieval of water channels following their insertion into apical membranes.
...
PMID:Microfilament network is needed for the endocytosis of water channels and not for apical membrane insertion upon vasopressin action. 1065 25
The mechanisms underlying age-related polyuria were investigated in 10- and 30-mo-old female WAG/Rij rats. Urinary volume and osmolality were 3.9 +/- 0.3 ml/24 h and 2,511 +/- 54 mosmol/kgH(2)O in adult rats and 12.8 +/- 0.8 ml/24 h and 1,042 +/- 44 mosmol/kgH(2)O in senescent animals.
Vasopressin
V(2) receptor mRNA did not significantly differ between 10 and 30 mo, and [(3)H]vasopressin binding sites in membrane papilla were reduced by 30%. The cAMP content of the papilla was unchanged with age, whereas papillary osmolality was significantly lowered in senescent animals. The expression of aquaporin-1 (AQP1) and -4 was mostly unaltered from 10 to 30 mo. In contrast, aquaporin-2 (AQP2) and -3 (AQP3) expression was downregulated by 80 and 50%, respectively, and AQP2 was markedly redistributed into the intracellular compartment, in inner medulla of senescent animals, but not in renal cortex. These results indicate that age-related polyuria is associated with a downregulation of AQP2 and AQP3 expression in the medullary
collecting duct
, which is independent of vasopressin-mediated cAMP accumulation.
...
PMID:Downregulation of aquaporin-2 and -3 in aging kidney is independent of V(2) vasopressin receptor. 1089 96
Vasopressin
V(2) receptors at high-density and V(1B) receptors are candidates for the V(2)-like receptor, which evokes an increase in [Ca(2+)](i) when stimulated by the vasopressin V(2) receptor agonist 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP) in kidney inner medullary
collecting duct
. We compared the pharmacological characteristics of vasopressin V(2) and V(1B) receptors in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells to those of vasopressin V(2)-like receptors in rat inner medullary
collecting duct
cells. The vasopressin V(1B) receptor-selective agonist [deamino-Cys(1), D-3-(Pyridyl)-Ala(2), Arg(8)]vasopressin (D3PVP) did not stimulate the [Ca(2+)](i) increase in high-density vasopressin V(2) receptor-expressing CHO cells, but did in inner medullary
collecting duct
cells. Moreover, the vasopressin V(1A)/V(2) receptor dual antagonist 4'-[(2-methyl-1,4,5,6-tetrahydroimidazo[4,5-d][1] benzazepin-6-yl)carbonyl] 2-phenylbenzanilide (YM087), which has no effect on vasopressin V(1B) receptors, did not block the [Ca(2+)](i) increase in inner medullary
collecting duct
cells when stimulated by dDAVP and D3PVP. On reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of kidney, vasopressin V(1B) receptor mRNA was detected only in the medulla. We propose that the true nature of the vasopressin V(2)-like receptor in the inner medullary
collecting duct
is the vasopressin V(1B) receptor, rather than the vasopressin V(2) receptor expressed at high-density.
...
PMID:Evidence that atypical vasopressin V(2) receptor in inner medulla of kidney is V(1B) receptor. 1093 86
In the renal
collecting duct
, vasopressin increases osmotic water permeability (P(f)) by triggering trafficking of aquaporin-2 vesicles to the apical plasma membrane. We investigated the role of vasopressin-induced intracellular Ca(2+) mobilization in this process. In isolated inner medullary collecting ducts (IMCDs), vasopressin (0.1 nm) and 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cAMP (0.1 mm) elicited marked increases in [Ca(2+)](i) (fluo-4).
Vasopressin
-induced Ca(2+) mobilization was completely blocked by preloading with the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA. In parallel experiments, BAPTA completely blocked the vasopressin-induced increase in P(f) without affecting adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) production. Previously, we demonstrated the lack of activation of the phosphoinositide-signaling pathway by vasopressin in IMCD, suggesting an inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-independent mechanism of Ca(2+) release. Evidence for expression of the type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1) in IMCD was obtained by immunofluorescence, immunoblotting, and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Ryanodine (100 microm), a ryanodine receptor antagonist, blocked the arginine vasopressin-mediated increase in P(f) and blocked vasopressin-stimulated redistribution of aquaporin-2 to the plasma membrane domain in primary cultures of IMCD cells, as assessed by immunofluorescence immunocytochemistry. Calmodulin inhibitors (W7 and trifluoperazine) blocked the P(f) response to vasopressin and the vasopressin-stimulated redistribution of aquaporin-2. The results suggest that Ca(2+) release from ryanodine-sensitive stores plays an essential role in vasopressin-mediated aquaporin-2 trafficking via a calmodulin-dependent mechanism.
...
PMID:Regulation of aquaporin-2 trafficking by vasopressin in the renal collecting duct. Roles of ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ stores and calmodulin. 1097 64
Vasopressin
V2-receptor antagonists are promising agents for the use in water-retaining diseases. Potential renal mechanisms of action include effects on water permeability in the
collecting duct
as well as on electrolyte transport in the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop (TALH). To elucidate sites of action upstream of the distal tubule, e.g., in TALH, micropuncture experiments were performed in anesthetized rats during application of the V2-receptor antagonist SR 121463B. As compared to vehicle-treated rats, SR 121463B (0.3 mg/kg i.v.) did not affect mean arterial blood pressure (means +/- SEM, n=10 rats per group: 108+/-4 mmHg vs. 107+/-4 mmHg), whole kidney GFR (1.1+/-0.1 ml/min vs. 1.1+/-0.1 ml/min), or whole kidney fractional reabsorption (FR) of potassium (66+/-5% vs. 68+/-4%). The drug, however, reduced whole kidney FR of fluid (92+/-1% vs. 99+/-1%), increased urinary flow rate (84+/-7 microl/min vs. 8+/-1 microl/min) and electrolyte-free-water clearance (72+/-8 microl/min vs. 2+/-1 microl/min), and reduced urinary osmolality (148+/-11 mosmol/kg vs. 1,200+/-185 mosmol/kg). This pronounced diuretic response was associated with a minor reduction in whole kidney FR of sodium (99.6+/-0.1% vs. 99.9+/-0.1%) and chloride (98.3+/-0.2% vs. 98.9+/-0.1%). As compared to vehicle application, SR 121463B did not significantly alter single nephron GFR (39+/-2 nl/min vs. 39+/-1 nl/min, n=22 and 23 nephrons, respectively) or the FR up to the early distal tubule of fluid (76+/-2% vs. 76+/-1%), sodium (92+/-1% vs. 93+/-1%), potassium (91+/-1% vs. 90+/-1%) or chloride (90+/-1% vs. 91+/-1%). Together these data indicate a predominant aquaretic effect of SR 121463B which is located downstream of the early distal tubule. This response is compatible with blockade of vasopressin V2-receptors in the
collecting duct
and, as directly demonstrated by immunohistochemistry, subsequent retrieval of aquaporin-2 from apical plasma membrane, which inhibits water permeability and transport.
...
PMID:Acute renal response to the non-peptide vasopressin V2-receptor antagonist SR 121463B in anesthetized rats. 1099 21
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