Literature DB >> 8621199

Pulse pressure correlates in humans with a proscillaridin A immunoreactive compound.

B Sich1, U Kirch, M Tepel, W Zidek, W Schoner.   

Abstract

Endogenous digitalis-like factors in humans are presumably cardenolides and bufadienolides. To test whether bufadienolide-like substances may circulate in human blood, we used antibodies from rabbits against the bufadienolide proscillaridin A to measure the concentration of cross-reacting material in human plasma with an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. IgG had an apparent affinity of 2 x 10(-9) mol/L for proscillaridin A. It was specific for bufadienolides and did not cross-react with cardenolides or several steroid hormones. Extraction of human plasma with ethanol and fractionation of this extract over a high-performance liquid chromatographic reverse-phase C18 column with a propanol/isopropanol gradient resulted in the separation of three peaks of increasing hydrophobicity (ED1, ED2, ED3) that inhibited the sodium pump of human red blood cells and cross-reacted with proscillaridin A antibodies. The concentration of the proscillaridin A immunoreactivity ED1 in normotensive subjects had a geometric mean of 0.1 nmol/L, with a dispersion factor of 8.77. ED1 correlated positively in a group of 60 normotensive subjects, 22 patients with hypertension, and 19 patients with chronic renal failure with mean arterial blood pressure (log ED1 [nmol/L] = 0.013 x mm Hg-2.17, r = .25, P < .05), systolic pressure (log ED1 [nmol/L] = 0.010 x mm Hg-2.23, r = .32, P < .01), and pulse pressure (log ED1 [nmol/L] = 0.019 x mm Hg-1.80, r = .38, P < .0001). There was no correlation with other parameters of the donors. We conclude that several substances cross-reacting with proscillaridin A antibodies and inhibiting the sodium pump of human red blood cells circulate in human blood. The level of one of these substances (ED1) correlates with mean arterial and pulse pressures.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8621199     DOI: 10.1161/01.hyp.27.5.1073

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  9 in total

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Review 4.  Endogenous cardiotonic steroids and salt-sensitive hypertension.

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Review 5.  Role of Na+/K+-ATPase in ischemic stroke: in-depth perspectives from physiology to pharmacology.

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6.  Circulating endogenous digitalis-like factor(s) (EDLF) in man is derived from the adrenals and its secretion is ACTH-dependent.

Authors:  A Sophocleous; I Elmatzoglou; A Souvatzoglou
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7.  Cardiac steroids induce changes in recycling of the plasma membrane in human NT2 cells.

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Review 8.  The central mechanism underlying hypertension: a review of the roles of sodium ions, epithelial sodium channels, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, oxidative stress and endogenous digitalis in the brain.

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Journal:  Hypertens Res       Date:  2011-08-04       Impact factor: 3.872

Review 9.  Endogenous cardiotonic steroids and cardiovascular disease, where to next?

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Journal:  Cell Calcium       Date:  2019-12-27       Impact factor: 6.817

  9 in total

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