Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Arginine vasopressin secretion increases in response to increased plasma osmolality or hypovolemia. Dehydration-induced increases in plasma arginine vasopressin levels have been shown to down-regulate arginine vasopressin V2 receptors in adult rat kidneys. Our study determined ovine maternal and fetal renal arginine vasopressin receptor characteristics and receptor response to maternal dehydration.STUDY DESIGN: Eight pregnant ewes (113 ± 1 days) were dehydrated for 72 hours; eight animals served as controls. Renal medullary tissue was isolated from maternal and fetal kidneys, and arginine vasopressin receptor characteristics determined with saturation and competition assays using tritiated arginine vasopressin, arginine vasopressin, and arginine vasopressin analogs.RESULTS: Euhydrated maternal and fetal renal medullary arginine vasopressin receptor dissociation constant (3.0 ± 0.3 and 1.9 ± 0.3 nmol/L) and maximal binding capacity (149 ± 15 and 111 ± 33 fmol/mg protein) values were similar. Pharmacologic profiles with selective agonists indicated a predominance of V2 receptors. Dehydration significantly increased maternal and fetal plasma osmolalities (304 ± 2 to 320 ± 2; 296 ± 1 to 319 ± 3 mOsm/kg water, respectively) and arginine vasopressin levels (3.8 ± 1.4 to 29.3 ± 4.6; 4.4 ± 1.0 to 16.9 ± 5.0 pg/ml, respectively) but had no effect on arginine vasopressin receptor binding.CONCLUSION: Specific, saturable, single-site tritiated arginine vasopressin binding is present in ovine maternal and fetal renal medullary membranes. Ovine maternal and fetal renal arginine vasopressin receptors do not down-regulate in response to dehydration-induced elevations in plasma arginine vasopressin levels. (AM J OBSTET GYNECOL 1992;167;1717-22.)

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