Abstract

Conscious dogs were instrumented to study the effects of atriopeptins (I, II, III) on renal, iliac, mesenteric, and coronary blood flow. Intravenous injection of atriopeptins II and III caused a dose-related increase in renal blood flow, whereas atriopeptin I had no effect. Atriopeptins II and III at 5 micrograms/kg increased renal blood flow 27 +/- 5.0% from 252 +/- 29 ml/min and 18 +/- 2.9% from 238 +/- 32 ml/min and reduced renal vascular resistance 24 +/- 3.2% from 0.431 +/- 0.048 mmHg X ml-1 X min and 15.1 +/- 1.2% from 0.443 +/- 0.023 mmHg X ml-1 X min, respectively. Atriopeptin I, II, or III exerted no significant effect on systemic arterial pressure, heart rate, coronary, mesenteric, or iliac blood flows. Doses of nitroglycerin (25 micrograms/kg) that increased renal blood flow (28 +/- 5.0%) to a degree comparable to atriopeptins II and III also caused increases in coronary, iliac, and mesenteric blood flows and produced falls in systemic blood pressure and a reflex tachycardia. Thus in the conscious dog, atriopeptins II and III are potent selective renal vasodilators that do not exhibit systemic hemodynamic effects in contrast to nitroglycerin, a nonselective vasodilator. Cleavage at the carboxy terminal end of these peptides to yield atriopeptin I abolishes the renal vasodilator action entirely.

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