Literature DB >> 6571415

Renotrophic factors in urine.

R H Harris, M K Hise, C F Best.   

Abstract

Our previous observations of increased renal protein synthesis in rats subjected to the constant intravenous reinfusion of half their urine output has suggested that the circulatory retention of renotrophic factors in urine is capable of stimulating renal growth. In the present studies, using this same model of "half-urine-reinfusion," which is designed to produce a selective halving of renal excretory function, we have demonstrated significant increases in total DNA content and the incorporation of tritiated thymidine in renal DNA. In addition, a bioassay method was developed in which an assay rat, given an intravenous infusion of urine from another rat, exhibited increases in the incorporation of thymidine into renal DNA and the incorporation of radiolabelled choline into renal phospholipid. This renotrophic activity in the urine was only minimally decreased by heating to 100 degrees C for 30 min and was confined to ultrafiltration fractions retained on a membrane with a nominal 10,000-dalton solute rejection. Removal of one kidney from the rats from which the urine was obtained led to only a modest and transient reduction in the excretion of renotrophic activity, suggesting that the urinary renotrophic factors are of circulatory, not renal, origin. Isolated renal cortical fragments incubated with an ultrafiltration retentate of urine displayed a dose-dependent increase in choline incorporation into phospholipid, suggesting a direct action of the factors on kidney tissue. Finally, no evidence of stimulation of either DNA or phospholipid synthesis could be seen in hepatic tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6571415     DOI: 10.1038/ki.1983.67

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  5 in total

Review 1.  Growth factors and renal cancer: characterization and therapeutic implications.

Authors:  J H Mydlo
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 4.226

2.  Acquired cystic disease of the kidney: serious or irrelevant?

Authors:  C J Rudge
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1986-11-08

3.  Renal cell carcinoma in chronic renal failure without dialysis treatment.

Authors:  I Sasagawa; T Nakada; Y Terasawa; H Takahashi
Journal:  Int Urol Nephrol       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 2.370

4.  Compensatory renal growth: interactions of nephrectomy serum and urine antisera leading to a new theory of renal growth regulation.

Authors:  B W Snow; W F Tarry; J W Duckett
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  1987

5.  The renotrophic factor, a persistent stimulus that crosses the placenta in mice.

Authors:  Z Averbukh; E Bogin; M Cohn; E Goren; D Modai; E Rosenmann; J Weissgarten
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1988-10       Impact factor: 5.182

  5 in total

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