| Literature DB >> 14624682 |
Cheryl L Holmes1, Donald W Landry, John T Granton.
Abstract
Vasopressin is emerging as a rational therapy for vasodilatory shock states. Unlike other vasoconstrictor agents, vasopressin also has vasodilatory properties. The goal of the present review is to explore the vascular actions of vasopressin. In part 1 of the review we discuss structure, signaling pathways, and tissue distributions of the classic vasopressin receptors, namely V1 vascular, V2 renal, V3 pituitary and oxytocin receptors, and the P2 class of purinoreceptors. Knowledge of the function and distribution of vasopressin receptors is key to understanding the seemingly contradictory actions of vasopressin on the vascular system. In part 2 of the review we discuss the effects of vasopressin on vascular smooth muscle and the heart, and we summarize clinical studies of vasopressin in shock states.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14624682 PMCID: PMC374366 DOI: 10.1186/cc2337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Hypothalamic nuclei involved in vasopressin control. The hypothalamus surrounds the third ventricle ventral to the hypothalamic sulci. The main hypothalamic nuclei subserving vasopressin control are the median preoptic nucleus (MNPO), the paraventricular nuclei (PVN), and the supraoptic nuclei (SON), which project to the posterior pituitary along the supraoptic–hypophyseal tract. Afferent nerve impulses from stretch receptors in the left atrium (inhibitory), aortic arch, and carotid sinuses (excitatory) travel via the vagus nerve, and neural pathways project to the PVN and the SON. These nuclei also receive osmotic input from the lamina terminalis, which is excluded from the blood–brain barrier and is thus affected by systemic osmolality. Vasopressin is synthesized in the cell bodies of the magnocellular neurons located in the PVN and SON. The magnocellular neurons of the SON are directly depolarized by hypertonic conditions (hence releasing more vasopressin) and hyperpolarized by hypotonic conditions (hence releasing less vasopressin). Finally, vasopressin migrates (in its prohormone state) along the supraoptic–hypophyseal tract to the posterior pituitary, where it is released into the circulation. Used by permission from Chest [95].
Figure 2Vasopressin docking and transmembrane topology of the human V1 vascular receptor (V1R). A model of arginine vasopressin (AVP), as bound to the human V1R, is depicted. Vasopressin is shown in ball-and-stick representation and the receptor is shown in ribbons. The intracellular loops of the receptor are labeled il1, il2, and il3, and the extracellular loops are labeled el1, el2, and el3. The transmembrane segments are labeled H1–H7. Reprinted from Thibonnier M, Coles P, Thibonnier A, Shoham M: Molecular pharmacology and modeling of vasopressin receptors. Prog Brain Res 2002, 139:179–196. © 2002, with permission from Elsevier [96].