Synthesis and renal activity of rat atrial granules depend on extracellular volume

1984 ◽  
Vol 247 (4) ◽  
pp. R750-R752
Author(s):  
U. Ackermann ◽  
T. G. Irizawa

Extracellular fluid volume (by 22Na) and extent of 4-h [3H]fucose incorporation into atrial-specific granules were measured in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)/salt-loaded or Na-deficient rats. The natriuretic potency of extracts from their atria was also measured in assay rats. DOCA/salt-treated animals had a significantly greater extracellular volume, a significantly greater degree of fucose uptake, and a significantly more potent diuretic and natriuretic effect than did Na-deficient rats. These observations, together with the known decrease in atrial granularity with DOCA treatment, suggest that a chronic increase in extracellular fluid volume is associated with increased synthesis and metabolism of atrial natriuretic factor. They also confirm the finding reported by others that granularity and natriuretic potency are not always directly related. It may be that visible granules represent a peptide storage form that requires further processing to become natriuretic.

1986 ◽  
Vol 251 (5) ◽  
pp. R947-R956 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. Verburg ◽  
R. H. Freeman ◽  
J. O. Davis ◽  
D. Villarreal ◽  
R. C. Vari

The aim of this study was to examine the changes in the concentration of plasma immunoreactive atrial natriuretic factor (iANF) that occur in response to expansion or depletion of the extracellular fluid volume in conscious dogs. The plasma iANF concentration was also measured postprandially after the ingestion of a meal containing 125 meq of sodium. Postprandial plasma iANF increased 45% (P less than 0.05) above the base-line concentration, and this increase was accompanied by a brisk natriuresis. After a low-sodium meal, however, plasma iANF and sodium excretion failed to increase. The plasma iANF concentration increased from 57 +/- 5 to 139 +/- 36 pg/ml (P less than 0.05) immediately after volume expansion with intravenous isotonic saline infusion (2.5% body wt) administered over a 30-min period; plasma iANF remained elevated at 90 +/- 14 pg/ml (P less than 0.05) for an additional 30 min before returning toward preinfusion levels. Plasma iANF decreased 45% from 78 +/- 17 to 43 +/- 7 pg/ml (P less than 0.05) in response to the administration of ethacrynic acid (2.0 mg/kg, iv bolus) that produced an estimated 15% depletion of intravascular volume. In additional experiments the infusion of synthetic alpha-human ANF at 100 and 300 ng X kg-1 X min-1 increased (P less than 0.05) both the plasma iANF concentration and the urinary excretion of iANF. This study demonstrates that the secretion of ANF is consistently influenced by changes in the extracellular fluid volume. Furthermore, the results support the concept that ANF functions to increase postprandial sodium excretion following the ingestion of a high-sodium meal.


1987 ◽  
Vol 73 (s17) ◽  
pp. 26P-26P ◽  
Author(s):  
R J D Winter ◽  
L Meleagros ◽  
S Pervez ◽  
T Krausz ◽  
J M Polak ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Aukland ◽  
R. K. Reed

While the study of the physiochemical composition and structure of the interstitium on a molecular level is a large and important field in itself, the present review centered mainly on the functional consequences for the control of extracellular fluid volume. As pointed out in section I, a biological monitoring system for the total extracellular volume seems very unlikely because a major part of that volume is made up of multiple, separate, and functionally heterogeneous interstitial compartments. Even less likely is a selective volume control of each of these compartments by the nervous system. Instead, as shown by many studies cited in this review, a local autoregulation of interstitial volume is provided by automatic adjustment of the transcapillary Starling forces and lymph flow. Local vascular control of capillary pressure and surface area, of special importance in orthostasis, has been discussed in several recent reviews and was mentioned only briefly in this article. The gel-like consistency of the interstitium is attributed to glycosaminoglycans, in soft connective tissues mainly hyaluronan. However, the concept of a gel phase and a free fluid phase now seems to be replaced by the quantitatively more well-defined distribution spaces for glycosaminoglycans and plasma protein, apparently in osmotic equilibrium with each other. The protein-excluded space, determined mainly by the content of glycosaminoglycans and collagen, has been measured in vivo in many tissues, and the effect of exclusion on the oncotic buffering has been clarified. The effect of protein charge on its excluded volume and on interstitial hydraulic conductivity has been studied only in lungs and is only partly clarified. Of unknown functional importance is also the recent finding of a free interstitial hyaluronan pool with relatively rapid removal by lymph. The postulated preferential channels from capillaries to lymphatics have received little direct support. Thus the variation of plasma-to-lymph passage times for proteins may probably be ascribed to heterogeneity with respect to path length, linear velocity, and distribution volumes. Techniques for measuring interstitial fluid pressure have been refined and reevaluated, approaching some concensus on slightly negative control pressures in soft connective tissues (0 to -4 mmHg), zero, or slightly positive pressure in other tissues. Interstitial pressure-volume curves have been recorded in several tissues, and progress has been made in clarifying the dependency of interstitial compliance on glycosaminoglycan-osmotic pressure, collagen, and microfibrils.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 622-629
Author(s):  
FRANCIS X. FELLERS ◽  
HENRY L. BARNETT ◽  
KENDRICK HARE ◽  
HELEN MCNAMARA

The spaces occupied by one or more of the four substances, thiocyanate, sodium24, mannitol and inulin, were determined in 36 subjects ranging from premature infants to adults. No conclusions could be drawn concerning the spaces occupied by mannitol and inulin, since, under the conditions of the observations in our human subjects, neither of these spaces reached a constant value. There is a definite decrease in the spaces occupied by thiocyanate and sodium24 as growth proceeds. If the changes in the spaces occupied by these two substances reflect corresponding changes in extracellular fluid volume, they indicate that young infants have an extracellular volume which is 57 (sodium24) to 78 (thiocyanate)% greater than that of the adult. The decrease in the spaces occupied by thiocyanate and sodium24 occurs at two distinct periods of growth: primarily during early infancy and also during adolescence.


1958 ◽  
Vol 192 (2) ◽  
pp. 401-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sydney M. Friedman ◽  
Harald F Scherrer ◽  
Miyoshi Nakashima ◽  
Constance L. Friedman

Using inulin as indicator of the extracellular volume, the distribution of sodium, potassium and water was studied in rats with diabetes insipidus produced by interrruption of the supraoptico-hypophyseal tract. A well defined increase in the extracellular fluid volume associated with normal plasma sodium and reduced plasma potassium concentration was uniformly present in the rats with diabetes insipidus. These changes occurred in nephrectomized animals and were thus independent of renal function, but were in some degree referable to an increase in adrenal function since they could be partially reversed by adrenal ablation.


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