13 research outputs found

    Thyroid cysts: a new extra-adrenal site of aldosterone synthase expression and increased aldosterone content

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    Abstract Background The rapid re-accumulation of fluid following aspiration of thyroid cystic lesions suggests that active transport of sodium and water may be involved in volume regulation of these lesions. In this study we address the possibility that aldosterone may take part in this process. Subjects and methods Thirty-one patients (29 women and two men), with a mean age of 52·7 ± 13·2 years (range: 27-77 years) underwent evaluation for thyroid nodules that had a sonographic cystic component. Cystic fluid obtained by FNA biopsy was sent for cytological examination and biochemical measurements. In 10 patients, material was collected for RNA extraction and determination of aldosterone synthase expression by RT-PCR amplification. Results All lesions were benign, cystic, colloid nodules. Cyst fluid aldosterone levels as measured by routine radioimmunoassay (RIA) were elevated above the normal plasma levels in all but five patients. Mean aldosterone levels were 27·1 ± 22·9 ng /dl (SD) (range: 5·9-117·5 ng/dl). In contrast, cyst cortisol values were in the low, low normal serum range (6·2 ± 2·9 µ g/dl, range: 0·2-10·2 µ g/dl). Sodium, chloride and potassium levels were 137 ± 4·7 mEq/l, 98 ± 5 mEq/l and 4·9 ± 1·4 mEq/l, respectively. Plasma aldosterone levels were normal in all patients tested. To confirm these results, 12 samples were assayed after extraction and chromatography using a highly specific antibody. Cyst aldosterone levels in this group were elevated above the normal serum range in all but one patient (mean concentration: 24·5 ± 14·6 ng/dl, range: 8·72-40·1 ng /dl). In this group, 18(OH)B levels were within the normal plasma range (12-55 ng /dl) in all but one patient (34·9 ± 17 ng/dl). Furthermore, aldosterone synthase mRNA expression was found in aspirates of four of 10 patients. Conclusions The increased aldosterone concentration and the presence of aldosterone synthase expression suggest that aldosterone may be locally produced and secreted in thyroid tissue. The pathophysiological implications of this finding remain to be established

    A particular phenotype in a girl with aldosterone synthase deficiency

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    Aldosterone synthase deficiency (ASD) usually presents in infancy as a life-threatening electrolyte imbalance. A 4-wk-old child of unrelated parents was examined for failure to thrive and salt-wasting. Notable laboratory findings were hyperkalemia, high plasma renin, and low-normal aldosterone levels. Urinary metabolite ratios of corticosterone/18-hydroxycorticosterone and 18-hydroxycorticosterone/aldosterone were intermediate between ASD type I and type II. Sequence analysis of CYP11B2, the gene encoding aldosterone synthase (P450c11AS), revealed that the patient was a compound heterozygote carrying a previously described mutation located in exon 4 causing a premature stop codon (E255X) and a further, novel mutation in exon 5 that also causes a premature stop codon (Q272X). The patient’s unaffected father was a heterozygous carrier of the E255X mutation, whereas the unaffected mother was a heterozygous carrier of the Q272X mutation. Therefore, the patient’s CYP11B2 encodes two truncated forms of aldosterone synthase predicted to be inactive because they lack critical active site residues as well as the heme-binding site. This case of ASD is of particular interest because despite the apparent lack of aldosterone synthase activity, the patient displays low-normal aldosterone levels, thus raising the question of its source

    Reduction in rat phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein-1 (PEBP1) after chronic corticosterone treatment may be paralleled by cognitive impairment: a first study

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    Chronic stress is associated with hippocampal atrophy and cognitive dysfunction. This study investigates how long-lasting administration of corticosterone as a mimic of experimentally induced stress affects psychometric performance and the expression of the phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein (PEBP1) in the adult hippocampus of one-year-old male rats. Psychometric investigations were conducted in rats before and after corticosterone treatment using a holeboard test system. Rats were randomly attributed to 2 groups (n = 7) for daily subcutaneous injection of either 26.8 mg/kg body weight corticosterone or sesame oil (vehicle control). Treatment was continued for 60 days, followed by cognitive retesting in the holeboard system. For protein analysis, the hippocampal proteome was separated by 2D electrophoresis (2DE) followed by image processing, statistical analysis, protein identification via peptide mass fingerprinting and gel matching and subsequent functional network mapping and molecular pathway analysis. Differential expression of PEBP1 was additionally quantified by Western blot analysis. Results show that chronic corticosterone significantly decreased rat hippocampal PEBP1 expression and induced a working and reference memory dysfunction. From this, we derive the preliminary hypothesis that PEBP1 may be a novel molecular mediator influencing cognitive integrity during chronic corticosterone exposure in rat hippocampus

    Rat tissue kallikrein releases a kallidin-like peptide from rat low-molecular-weight kininogen

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    1. The kallikrein–kinin system is subdivided into the plasma and tissue–kallikrein–kinin system, with bradykinin (BK) and kallidin (KAL) (Lys(0)-bradykinin) as functional peptides. This occurs in both humans and other mammals. Both peptides are released by plasma and tissue–kallikrein. BK, but not KAL, has been detected in rats until now. One can explain this observation by the structural differences found in the sequence of rat high- and low-molecular kininogen containing an Arg-residue instead of a Lys-residue in front of the N-terminus of the BK sequence. Nevertheless, we were able to measure a kallidin-like peptide (KLP), in rat plasma and urine, using a specific KAL antiserum. 2. In order to confirm our data, we isolated low-molecular-weight kininogen from rat plasma and incubated it with purified rat glandular kallikrein. The generated peptide was retained on a high-pressure liquid chromatography column and displaced by an excess of angiotensin I. The KLP-containing fraction was identified with the KLP radioimmunoassay. A specific ion signal with a mass to charge ratio (m/z) of 1216.73 was detected with matrix-assited laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry. 3. As proposed earlier, the structure of this peptide is Arg(1)-KAL, instead of Lys(1)-KAL. The structural similarity between the Lys- and the Arg-residue explains the high crossreactivity (80%) of KLP with the specific KAL antibody. 4. The incubation of KLP with angiotensin-converting enzyme yields two molecules with masses of 913.4 and 729.3 containing the sequence H–Arg–Arg–Pro–Pro–Gly–Phe–Ser–Pro–OH and H–Arg–Arg–Pro–Pro–Gly–Phe–OH. The enzymatic cleavage could be inhibited by captopril. 5. The data suggest that in rats, as in other mammals, the tissue kallikrein–kinin system mediates its physiological effects via a kallidin-like peptide, which is Arg(1)-kallidin (Arg(0)-bradykinin)

    A kallidin-like peptide is a protective cardiac kinin, released by ischaemic preconditioning of rat heart

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    1. Bradykinin is thought to play a major role among the endogenous cardioprotective candidates of ischaemic preconditioning (IPC). Little attention has been paid to the fact that in the tissue kallidin (KAL), rather than bradykinin might be the physiological mediator of the kallikrein–kinin system. In order to evaluate the importance of one or the other peptide the release and effect of both kinins has been investigated in isolated rat hearts following IPC. 2. Bradykinin- and a KAL-like peptide were measured in the effluent of the rat isolated Langendorff heart with two different specific radioimmunoassays. The creatine kinase activity in the effluent was judged as degree of cardiac injury caused by ischaemia. 3. During IPC, which consists of three 5 min no-flow and 5 min reperfusion cycles prior to the 30 min ischaemia, the bradykinin level in the effluent did not change significantly (15.4–19.4 pg ml(−1)). In the control group the bradykinin levels were 15.9–16.6 pg ml(−1). 4. During IPC KAL-like peptide (Arg(1)-, instead of Lys(1)-KAL), which has recently been verified by mass spectrometry, displays 5.8-fold higher levels in the effluent and significantly increases in the same time interval from 90.4 to 189 pg ml(−1). 5. After 30 min ischaemia the bradykinin levels in the IPC group were not significantly different to those of the control group (18.7 vs 14.4 pg ml(−1)). The KAL-like peptide levels in the IPC group vs the control group were 105 vs 86.1 pg ml(−1). 6. By the 30 min ischaemia the creatine kinase activity in the IPC group increased from 0.367 to 8.93 U l(−1) (before and 10–30 min after ischaemia). In the control group during the same time period the creatine kinase levels increased from 0.277 to 34.9 U l(−1). The low increase in creatine kinase activity following IPC was taken as equivalent of the cardioprotective action. A KAL antibody or HOE140 (kinin B(2)-receptor antagonist) completely abolished this beneficial effect of IPC (36.6 and 53.0 U l(−1)) when added to the perfusion medium during the reperfusion cycles of IPC prior to the 30 min ischaemia. 7. Our data suggest that in rat hearts KAL-like peptide rather than bradykinin is the physiological compound activated by IPC and acting via the cardiac kinin B(2)-receptor. Thus, endogenously generated KAL-like peptide seems to play a major role in the cardioprotection of IPC

    Kallidin-like peptide mediates the cardioprotective effect of the ACE inhibitor captopril against ischaemic reperfusion injury of rat heart

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    1. The potential cardioprotective effect of ACE inhibitors has been attributed to the inhibition of bradykinin degradation. Recent data in rats documented a kallidin-like peptide, which mimics the cardioprotective effect of ischaemic preconditioning. This study investigates in isolated Langendorff rat heart the effect of the ACE inhibitor captopril, the role of bradykinin, kallidin-like peptide, and nitric oxide (NO). 2. The bradykinin level in the effluent of the control group was 14.6 pg ml(−1) and was not affected by captopril in the presence or absence of kinin B(2)-receptor antagonist, HOE140. 3. The kallidin-like peptide levels were approximately six-fold higher (89.8 pg ml(−1)) and increased significantly by treatment with captopril (144 pg ml(−1)), and simultaneous treatment with captopril and HOE140 (197 pg ml(−1)). 4. Following 30 min ischaemia in the control group, the creatine kinase activity increased from 0.4 to 53.4 U l(−1). In the captopril group and in the captopril+L-NAME group, the creatine kinase activity was significantly lower (18.5 and 22.8 U l(−1)). This beneficial effect of captopril was completely abolished by the kinin B(2)-receptor antagonist, HOE140, as well as by the kallidin antiserum. 5. Perfusion of the hearts with kallidin before the 30 min ischaemia, but not with bradykinin, yielded an approximately 50% reduction in creatine kinase activity after reperfusion. 6. Pretreatment with L-NAME alone and simultaneously with captopril, and with kallidin, respectively, suggests a kinin-independent action of NO before the 30 min ischaemia on coronary flow and a kinin-dependent action after ischaemia. 7. These data show that captopril increases kallidin-like peptide in the effluent. Kallidin-like peptide via kinin B(2) receptor seems to be the physiological mediator of cardioprotective actions of captopril against ischaemic reperfusion injury. HOE140 as well as the kallidin antiserum abolished the cardioprotective effects of captopril
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