Literature DB >> 10981146

Renal dopamine and sodium homeostasis.

P A Jose1, G M Eisner, R A Felder.   

Abstract

During the past decade, it has become evident that dopamine plays an important role in the regulation of fluid and electrolyte balance and blood pressure. Dopamine exerts its actions through two families of dopamine receptors, designated D1-like and D2-like, which are identical in the brain and in peripheral tissues. The two D1-like receptors--D1 and D5 receptors--expressed in mammals are linked to stimulation of adenylyl cyclase. The three D2-like receptors--D2, D3, and D4,--are linked to inhibition of adenylyl cyclase. Dopamine affects fluid and electrolyte balance by regulation of renal excretion of electrolytes and water through actions on renal hemodynamics and tubular epithelial transport and by modulation of the secretion and/or action of vasopressin, renin, aldosterone, catecholamines, and endothelin B receptors (ETB) receptors. It also affects fluid and sodium intake by way of "appetite" centers in the brain and alterations of gastrointestinal tract transport. The production of dopamine in neural and non-neural tissues and the presence of receptors in these tissues suggest that dopamine can act in an autocrine or paracrine fashion. This renal autocrine-paracrine function, which becomes most evident during extracellular fluid volume expansion, is lost in essential hypertension and in some animal models of genetic hypertension. This deficit may be caused by abnormalities in renal dopamine production and polymorphisms or abnormal post-translational modification and regulation of dopamine receptor subtypes.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10981146     DOI: 10.1007/s11906-000-0079-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep        ISSN: 1522-6417            Impact factor:   5.369


  83 in total

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3.  Role of vasopressin in essential hypertension: racial differences.

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9.  Organ specificity of the dopamine1 receptor/adenylyl cyclase coupling defect in spontaneously hypertensive rats.

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  17 in total

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Review 5.  Dopamine receptor-coupling defect in hypertension.

Authors:  Pedro A Jose; Gilbert M Eisner; Robin A Felder
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 5.369

6.  Dopamine D2-like receptor-mediated opening of K+ channels in opossum kidney cells.

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Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 8.739

7.  Chronic regulation of the renal Na(+)/H(+) exchanger NHE3 by dopamine: translational and posttranslational mechanisms.

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Review 8.  Dopamine receptors and hypertension.

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9.  Renal proximal tubules from old Fischer 344 rats grow into epithelial cells in cultures and exhibit increased oxidative stress and reduced D1 receptor function.

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