Browsing by Author "BORIC, MP"
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- ItemBLUNTING EFFECT OF PEPSANURIN INTRODUCED IN THE DUODENUM ON THE ATRIAL-NATRIURETIC-PEPTIDE DIURETIC ACTION IN RATS(1993) CROXATTO, HR; BORIC, MP; ROBLERO, JS; ALBERTINI, RPepsanurin (PU) is a peptide(s) obtained by pepsin hydrolysis of human plasma or its globulin fraction. We have reported that the accelerated renal excretory rate induced by atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) can be considerably blunted by PU either in the intact rat or in the isolated perfused rat kidney. We explored whether or not PU can be part of a signaling mechanism originated in the digestive tract, involved in the regulation of water and electrolyte homeostasis. PU obtained either from human (0.5 ml) or rat plasma (0.25-0.5 ml) administered into the duodenal lumen of rats, counteracted significantly the diuretic-saluretic action ot a 0.5- mug bolus of ANP, reproducing qualitatively the effect of its intraperitoneal administration. Human PU reduced the ANP-stimulated renal excretion by 67-90% for Na (P < 0.001) and by 35-54% for water (P < 0.02-P < 0.001); the inhibition induced by rat PU was 45-96% for Na (P < 0.05-P < 0.01) and 35-65% for water (P < 0.05-P < 0.01). Rat PU (0.5 ml) abolished the rise of glomerular filtration rate induced by ANP without affecting fractional Na excretion. All the samples tested decreased K excretion, but in some experiments, the difference did not reach statistical significance. Contrary to the effect of PU, the introduction in the duodenum of (i) isotonic glucose solution, (ii) hydrolysate of bovine serum albumin, or (iii) hydrolysate of casein prepared after the same procedure yielding PU from plasma failed to produce an inhibition of the ANP stimulation of renal excretory rate. In addition, human plasma incubated at 37-degrees-C for 24 to 48 hr, prior to pepsin digestion, did not yield PU, which indicates that PU is generated from a substrate sensitive to endogenous enzymes and/or that its stability is vulnerable to endogenous enzymes.
- ItemENDOTHELIN REDUCES MICROVASCULAR BLOOD-FLOW BY ACTING ON ARTERIOLES AND VENULES OF THE HAMSTER-CHEEK POUCH(1990) BORIC, MP; DONOSO, V; FOURNIER, A; STPIERRE, S; HUIDOBROTORO, JPSuperfusion of the cheek pouch with 0.1-10 nM endothelin (E) produced a concentration-related reduction in the clearance of 22Na+ used as an indicator of microvascular plasma flow. The median effective concentration was about 2 nM. The time course of E action was also concentration related. Superfusion with 10 nM E for 10 min caused a greater than 80% reduction in 22Na+ clearance; the rate at which the action of E started was significantly faster than the rate at which its action ended. Recovery did not exceed 70% even though the tissue was superfused with drug-free buffer for 90 min. The E-induced reduction in 22Na+ clearance was associated with vasoconstriction, as determined by intravital microscopy. Arterioles by 4th branching order were more sensitive to E action than arterioles of 1st or 2nd order; however, the constriction lasted considerably longer in the latter vessels. E-induced venular constriction followed a pattern analogous to that of arterioles of the same category, with the exception that the finer venules responded the least. Pretreatment of the cheek pouch with 300 nM nifedipine diminished but did not abolish the 1 nM E-induced reduction in 22Na+ clearance, and the recovery of clerance upon E washout was not accelerated by nifedipine.
- ItemINHIBITION OF ATRIAL-NATRIURETIC-PEPTIDE INDUCED NATRIURESIS BY PLASMA HYDROLYSATES CONTAINING PEPSANURIN(1992) BORIC, MP; CROXATTO, HR; ALBERTINI, R; ROBLERO, JSThe specificity of antidiuretic actions of pepsanurin, a peptidic fraction obtained by pepsin hydrolysis of plasma, was studied in anesthetized rats and in isolated perfused rat kidneys. Pepsanurin was obtained from fresh dialyzed human plasma digested with pepsin (2,400 units/ml, 18 hours at 37-degrees-C, pH 2.5), deproteinized (10 minutes at 80-degrees-C), and centrifuged. In the rat, intraperitoneal injections of pepsanurin (0.5 ml/100 g body wt) significantly inhibited the effects of an intravenous bolus of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) (0.5-mu-g) on water, sodium, and potassium excretion without altering systemic blood pressure. In addition, pepsanurin abolished the peak in glomerular filtration rate and reduced the ANP-induced rise in fractional sodium excretion. Pepsanurin also inhibited the natriuretic effects of amiloride (10-mu-g/100 g body wt i.v.) without changing glomerular filtration rate, but it did not inhibit the potassium-retaining effect of amiloride. In contrast, pepsanurin had no effect on basal urinary excretion, and it did not affect the diuretic response induced by furosemide (doses of 25, 50, or 100-mu-g i.v.). Control peptidic hydrolysates prepared from human plasma preincubated 48 hours at 37-degrees-C (PIPH), bovine albumin (BSAH), or human albumin did not inhibit ANP, amiloride, or furosemide. In perfused kidneys, pepsanurin significantly and reversibly reduced sodium and water excretion. Furthermore, pepsanurin, but not PIPH or BSAH, blocked the natriuretic and diuretic effects of ANP. These results support the existence of a specific plasma substrate able to release a peptide or peptides that counteract distal tubule diuresis and natriuresis by an intrarenal mechanism.
- ItemLEUKOCYTES EXPRESS CONNEXIN-43 AFTER ACTIVATION WITH LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE AND APPEAR TO FORM GAP-JUNCTIONS WITH ENDOTHELIAL-CELLS AFTER ISCHEMIA-REPERFUSION(1995) JARA, PI; BORIC, MP; SAEZ, JCLevels and subcellular distribution of connexin 43 (Cx43), a gap junction protein, were studied in hamster leukocytes before and after activation with endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) both in vitro and in vivo. Untreated leukocytes did not express Cx43. However, Cx43 was clearly detectable by indirect immunofluorescence in cells treated in vitro with LPS (1 mu g/ml, 3 hr). Cx43 was also detected in leukocytes obtained from the peritoneal cavity 5-7 days after LPS-induced inflammation. In some leukocytes that formed clusters Cx43 immunoreactivity was present at appositional membranes, suggesting formation of homotypic gap junctions, In cell homogenates of activated peritoneal macrophages, Cx43, detected by Western blot analysis, was mostly unphosphorylated. A second in vivo inflammatory condition studied was that induced by ischemia-reperfusion of the hamster cheek pouch. In this system, leukocytes that adhered to venular endothelial cells after 1 hr of ischemia, followed by 1 hr of reperfusion, expressed Cx43, Electron microscope observations revealed small close appositions, putative gap junctions, at leukocyte-endothelial cell and leukocyte-leukocyte contacts. These results indicate that the expression of Cx43 can be induced in leukocytes during an inflammatory response which might allow for heterotypic or homotypic intercellular gap junctional communication, Gap junctions may play a role in leukocyte extravasation.