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      A Novel Category of Anti-Hypertensive Drugs for Treating Salt-Sensitive Hypertension on the Basis of a New Development Concept

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          Abstract

          Terrestrial animals must conserve water and NaCl to survive dry environments. The kidney reabsorbs 95% of the sodium filtered from the glomeruli before sodium reaches the distal connecting tubules. Excess sodium intake requires the renal kallikrein-kinin system for additional excretion. Renal kallikrein is secreted from the distal connecting tubule cells of the kidney, and its substrates, low molecular kininogen, from the principal cells of the cortical collecting ducts (CD). Formed kinins inhibit reabsorption of NaCl through bradykinin (BK)-B 2 receptors, localized along the CD. Degradation pathway of BK by kinin-destroying enzymes in urine differs completely from that in plasma, so that ACE inhibitors are ineffective. Urinary BK is destroyed mainly by a carboxypeptidase-Y-like exopeptidase (CPY) and partly by a neutral endopeptidase (NEP). Inhibitors of CPY and NEP, ebelactone B and poststatin, respectively, were found. Renal kallikrein secretion is accelerated by potassium and ATP-sensitive potassium (K ATP) channel blockers, such as PNU-37883A. Ebelactone B prevents DOCA-salt hypertension in rats. Only high salt intake causes hypertension in animals deficient in BK-B 2 receptors, tissue kallikrein, or kininogen. Hypertensive patients, and spontaneously hypertensive rats, excrete less kallikrein than normal subjects, irrespective of races, and become salt-sensitive. Ebelactone B, poststatin, and K ATP channel blockers could become novel antihypertensive drugs by increase in urinary kinin levels. Roles of kinin in cardiovascular diseases were discussed.

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          The multifunctional fish gill: dominant site of gas exchange, osmoregulation, acid-base regulation, and excretion of nitrogenous waste.

          The fish gill is a multipurpose organ that, in addition to providing for aquatic gas exchange, plays dominant roles in osmotic and ionic regulation, acid-base regulation, and excretion of nitrogenous wastes. Thus, despite the fact that all fish groups have functional kidneys, the gill epithelium is the site of many processes that are mediated by renal epithelia in terrestrial vertebrates. Indeed, many of the pathways that mediate these processes in mammalian renal epithelial are expressed in the gill, and many of the extrinsic and intrinsic modulators of these processes are also found in fish endocrine tissues and the gill itself. The basic patterns of gill physiology were outlined over a half century ago, but modern immunological and molecular techniques are bringing new insights into this complicated system. Nevertheless, substantial questions about the evolution of these mechanisms and control remain.
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            The emerging roles of human tissue kallikreins in cancer.

            Human tissue kallikreins (hKs), which are encoded by the largest contiguous cluster of protease genes in the human genome, are secreted serine proteases with diverse expression patterns and physiological roles. Although primarily known for their clinical applicability as cancer biomarkers, recent evidence implicates hKs in many cancer-related processes, including cell-growth regulation, angiogenesis, invasion and metastasis. They have been shown to promote or inhibit neoplastic progression, acting individually and/or in cascades with other hKs and proteases, and might represent attractive targets for therapeutic intervention.
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              The effect of high-sodium and low-sodium intakes on blood pressure and other related variables in human subjects with idiopathic hypertension.

              Nineteen patients with hypertension in whom all known causes of blood pressure elevation had been ruled out were classified as "salt-sensitive" or "nonsalt-sensitive" from the changes in blood pressure with changes in sodium intake from 9 meq to 249 meq/day. With the diet containing 249 meq sodium per day, there were no statistically significant differences in plasma sodium, potassium, chloride, aldosterone, cortisol or renin activity, or in urinary potassium, aldosterone or 17-hydroxycorticosteroids between the two groups. The "salt-sensitive" patients retained more sodium on the high-sodium diet than did the patients who were not sensitive to salt ("nonsalt-sensitive"); accordingly, sodium induced more weight gain in the salt-sensitive patients.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pharmaceuticals (Basel)
                Pharmaceuticals (Basel)
                pharmaceuticals
                Pharmaceuticals
                Molecular Diversity Preservation International
                1424-8247
                07 January 2010
                January 2010
                : 3
                : 1
                : 59-109
                Affiliations
                Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Kitasato University, Sagamihara, Kanagawa 228-8555, Japan
                Author notes
                [* ] Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: hy3m-ktr@ 123456asahi-net.or.jp .
                Article
                pharmaceuticals-03-00059
                10.3390/ph3010059
                3991021
                250efbdd-b6a2-451f-bcba-6ab719e14d4d
                © 2010 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

                History
                : 24 October 2009
                : 24 December 2009
                : 06 January 2010
                Categories
                Review

                renal kallikrein,atp-sensitive potassium channel,poststatin ebelactone b,salt-sensitive hypertension

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