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      The heart and the atrial natriuretic factor.

      Endocrine Reviews
      Adrenal Glands, drug effects, Animals, Atrial Function, Atrial Natriuretic Factor, Blood Vessels, Blood Volume, Cattle, Chickens, Cricetinae, Dogs, Guinea Pigs, Heart, physiology, Humans, Hypertension, physiopathology, Immersion, Kidney, Muscle Proteins, analysis, biosynthesis, immunology, metabolism, pharmacology, Natriuresis, Pituitary Gland, Radioimmunoassay, Rats, Receptors, Cell Surface, Rectum, Sodium, Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase, antagonists & inhibitors

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          Abstract

          The search for natriuretic hormones or factors by studies of negative pressure breathing, atrial distension experiments, head-out water immersion, expansion of blood volume, Na+/K+-ATPase inhibitors and parabiosis experiments in Dahl rats has led to the finding that the atria are a peptide-secreting endocrine gland. This new natriuretic hormone has now been purified, sequenced and synthetized, and its cDNA and gene have been cloned. The native and synthetic hormones exert identical wide ranging effects (possibly through particulate guanylate cyclase stimulation and adenylate cyclase inhibition) on the kidney, blood vessels, adrenal cortex, and pituitary. Physiopathologic implications of the hormone in experimental hypertension, congestive heart failure, and expansion of blood volume are beginning to emerge.

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