PMID: 9171961Jun 1, 1997Paper

Stimulation of gastric osmoreceptors but not the sodium monitor increases renal angiotensin-converting enzyme activity

Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology & Physiology
V Z Ye, K A Duggan

Abstract

1. Stimulation of the gastric sodium monitor has been reported to cause a decrease in renal nerve activity and also a decrease in plasma renin activity in renal venous blood. This suggests that changes in sympathetic nerve activity and in the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system may mediate the natriuresis that occurs following gastric sodium administration. In the present study we sought to determine whether gastric sodium administration also modulates angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity in the kidney. 2. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were equilibrated on a low-sodium (0.008%) diet for 7 days. On the day of the experiment, rats were anaesthetized and kidneys were harvested and immediately snap frozen at 0 and 60 min after intragastric administration of a saline load (1.5 mmol/kg as 3 mol/L saline) or an equivalent volume of iso-osmotic urea (5.95%). Angiotensin-converting enzyme activity was determined by incubation of kidney homogenates with hippuryl-histidyl-leucine and fluorometric assay of the histidyl-leucine generated. 3. Angiotensin-converting enzyme activity in the kidney increased in response to the intragastric administration of both sodium chloride and urea. Angiotensin-converting enzyme activity increased signif...Continue Reading

References

Aug 1, 1976·American Journal of Clinical Pathology·J Friedland, E Silverstein

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