Abstract

The biological properties of vasotocin, hydrin 1 (vasotocinyl-Gly-Lys-Arg) and hydrin 2 (vasotocinyl-Gly), in particular the hydro-osmotic activities on the frog skin, the frog urinary bladder and the frog kidney, have been compared. Hydrins are as active or more active than vasotocin on the first two organs but they are virtually devoid of antidiuretic activity in the rat and the frog, in contrast to vasotocin. It appears that where the oxytocin ring (residues 1-6), present in the three peptides, is necessary for the action on the three organs, the C-terminal amidated group of vasotocin is necessary for the renal receptor but not for the skin and bladder receptors. It is known that amphibians have two types of vasotocin receptors, V1 and V2, homologous to the vascular/hepatic V1 and the renal V2 vasopressin receptors of mammals, respectively. We suggest that adaptation has led to specialization of (at least) two subtypes of hydro-osmotic V2 receptors, the renal subtype on which vasotocin is mainly active for the reabsorption of tubular water, and the skin/bladder subtype on which hydrin 2 is specifically involved in ensuring the rehydration of the animal. Cooperative evolution might have created in anuran Amphibia, on the one hand, two hydro-osmotic peptides, vasotocin and hydrin 2, derived from a single precursor through differential processing; and on the other hand, two corresponding receptors in kidney and skin for internal and external water recovery.

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