521 research outputs found

    Improved immunoradiometric assay for plasma renin

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    BACKGROUND: Our renin IRMA overestimated renin in plasmas with high prorenin-to-renin ratios. We suspected that the overestimation of renin was caused less by cross-reactivity of the renin-specific antibody with prorenin than by a conformational change of prorenin into an enzymatically active form during the assay. METHODS: Because the inactive form of prorenin converts slowly into an active form at low temperature, we raised the assay temperature from 22 degrees C to 37 degrees C, simultaneously shortening the incubation time from 24 to 6 h. The former IRMA was performed in <1 working day with these modifications. RESULTS: The comeasurement of prorenin as renin was eliminated. Reagents were stable at 37 degrees C, and the new and old IRMAs were comparable in terms of precision and accuracy. The functional lower limit of the assay (4 mU/L) was below the lower reference limit (9 mU/L). The modified IRMA agreed closely with the activities measured with an enzyme-kinetic assay. Results were not influenced by the plasma concentration of angiotensinogen. At normal angiotensinogen concentrations, the IRMA closely correlated with the classical enzyme-kinetic assay of plasma renin activity. CONCLUSION: The modified IRMA, performed at 37 degrees C, avoids interference by prorenin while retaining the desirable analytical characteristics of the older IRMA and requiring less time

    Structure and Regulation of Prorenin

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    The treatment and prevention of cardiovascular disease is one ofthe triumphs of modern medicine but we have a long way to go before this success is completed. Heart attack and stroke are still common and, in the western world, cardiovascular disease remains the main cause of morbidity and mortality. A major player in cardiovascular homeostasis is the renin.angiotensin system (RAS), and the growing knowledge of this system has led to the development of agents that specifically interact with components that are part of the RAS. 'Anti-RAS' drugs are now widely used in the management of hypertension, heart failure and diabetic nephropathy. However, as is true for cardiovascular medicine in general, many problems remain to be solved. Our understanding of how the RAS works and how to modify its actions is still far from complete. One century ago Tigerstedt and Bergmann coined the name 'renin' for a hypertensive factor in rabbit kidney. I They showed that this factor was present in renal cortex and that it was secreted into renal venous blood. It was retained by dialysis membranes and sensitive to heat, which suggested its protein. nature. After these initial observations renin sank into oblivion for a few decades until interest flared up after the experiments by Goldblatt et al., who showed that clamping a renal artery in a dog caused hypertension. They believed a humoral factor to be the hypertensive principle, which was shown to be renin by Pickering et al. From then on unraveling of the structure of what nowadays is known as the RAS made steady progress, culminating in the cloning of the genes of its constituents

    Mateship and Money-Making: Shearing in Twentieth Century Australia

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    After the turmoil of the 1890s shearing contractors eliminated some of the frustration from shearers recruitment. At the same time closer settlement concentrated more sheep in small flocks in farming regions, replacing the huge leasehold pastoral empires which were at the cutting edge of wool expansion in the nineteenth century. Meanwhile the AWU succeeded in getting an award for the pastoral industry under the new arbitration legislation in 1907. Cultural and administrative influences, therefore, eased some of the bitter enmity which had made the annual shearing so unstable. Not all was plain sailing. A pattern of militancy re-emerged during World War I. Shearing shed unrest persisted throughout the interwar period and during World War II. In the 1930s a rival union with communist connections, the PWIU, was a major disruptive influence. Militancy was a factor in a major shearing strike in 1956, when the boom conditions of the early-1950s were beginning to fade. The economic system did not have satisfactory mechanisms to cope. Unionised shearers continued to be locked in a psyche of confrontation as wool profits eroded further in the 1970s. This ultimately led to the wide comb dispute, which occurred as wider pressures changed an economic order which had not been seriously challenged since Federation, and which the AWU had been instrumental in shaping. Shearing was always identified with bushworker ‘mateship’, but its larrikinism and irreverence to authority also fostered individualism, and an aggressive ‘moneymaking’ competitive culture. Early in the century, when old blade shearers resented the aggressive pursuit of tallies by fast men engaged by shearing contractors, tensions boiled over. While militants in the 1930s steered money-makers into collectivist versions of mateship, in the farming regions the culture of self-improvement drew others towards the shearing competitions taking root around agricultural show days. Others formed their own contracting firms and had no interest in confrontation with graziers. Late in the century New Zealanders arrived with combs an inch wider than those that had been standard for 70 years. It was the catalyst for the assertion of meritocracy over democracy, which had ruled since Federation

    Quality of herbage at different latitudes.

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    In a cooperative experiment, yield and herbage quality of timothy was measured during the uninterrupted growth of the 1st cut at 6 lat. (51-69 deg N). Rate of production was greatest at Tromso (69 deg N), apparently because of the long day and rapid reproductive development. Digestibility of OM declined faster at higher lat. because stem development proceeded faster and less leaf DM was produced. At the same morphological stage, digestibility of the whole crop was better at higher lat. because of the better digestibility of the cell walls from the stems. It was concluded that rate of lignification could not keep pace with the rapid rate of stem development. (Abstract retrieved from CAB Abstracts by CABI’s permission
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