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A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides

A sensitive and precise method for assaying the water permeability response evoked by neurohypophyseal hormones and their synthetic analogues on the isolated urinary bladder of the toad (Bufo marinus L.) is described. The method permits detection of 8-arginine-vasotocin at concentrations as low as 1...

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Autores principales: Eggena, Patrick, Schwartz, Irving L., Walter, Roderich
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1968
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2225828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5691711
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author Eggena, Patrick
Schwartz, Irving L.
Walter, Roderich
author_facet Eggena, Patrick
Schwartz, Irving L.
Walter, Roderich
author_sort Eggena, Patrick
collection PubMed
description A sensitive and precise method for assaying the water permeability response evoked by neurohypophyseal hormones and their synthetic analogues on the isolated urinary bladder of the toad (Bufo marinus L.) is described. The method permits detection of 8-arginine-vasotocin at concentrations as low as 10(-12) M. This sensitivity, not achieved heretofore with this tissue, results largely from minimizing interference of inhibitory substances by means of an "in vitro circulation assembly." The precision of the method derives from a direct comparison between the cumulative dose-response curve of an agonist of unknown potency acting on one hemibladder and that of a reference compound acting on the contralateral hemibladder. Crystalline deamino-oxytocin is used as the reference standard in this assay. The intrinsic activity of 2-(O-methyltyrosine)-oxytocin, as defined by the maximal response, is 12% lower than that of deamino-oxytocin. All other hormonal peptides investigated have the same intrinsic activity as deamino-oxytocin, even 5-valine-oxytocin, in spite of its extremely low affinity. A comparison of the potencies of 8-arginine-vasotocin vs. 8-arginine-vasopressin, 8-ornithine-vasotocin vs. 8-ornithine-vasopressin, 8-alanine-oxytocin vs. 8-alanine-oxypressin, and deamino-8-alanine-oxytocin vs. deamino-8-alanine-oxypressin suggests that an isoleucine residue in position 3 imparts a higher specificity for binding of the hormonal peptide molecule to the bladder receptor than a phenylalanine residue in this locus.
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spelling pubmed-22258282008-04-23 A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides Eggena, Patrick Schwartz, Irving L. Walter, Roderich J Gen Physiol Article A sensitive and precise method for assaying the water permeability response evoked by neurohypophyseal hormones and their synthetic analogues on the isolated urinary bladder of the toad (Bufo marinus L.) is described. The method permits detection of 8-arginine-vasotocin at concentrations as low as 10(-12) M. This sensitivity, not achieved heretofore with this tissue, results largely from minimizing interference of inhibitory substances by means of an "in vitro circulation assembly." The precision of the method derives from a direct comparison between the cumulative dose-response curve of an agonist of unknown potency acting on one hemibladder and that of a reference compound acting on the contralateral hemibladder. Crystalline deamino-oxytocin is used as the reference standard in this assay. The intrinsic activity of 2-(O-methyltyrosine)-oxytocin, as defined by the maximal response, is 12% lower than that of deamino-oxytocin. All other hormonal peptides investigated have the same intrinsic activity as deamino-oxytocin, even 5-valine-oxytocin, in spite of its extremely low affinity. A comparison of the potencies of 8-arginine-vasotocin vs. 8-arginine-vasopressin, 8-ornithine-vasotocin vs. 8-ornithine-vasopressin, 8-alanine-oxytocin vs. 8-alanine-oxypressin, and deamino-8-alanine-oxytocin vs. deamino-8-alanine-oxypressin suggests that an isoleucine residue in position 3 imparts a higher specificity for binding of the hormonal peptide molecule to the bladder receptor than a phenylalanine residue in this locus. The Rockefeller University Press 1968-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2225828/ /pubmed/5691711 Text en Copyright © 1968 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Eggena, Patrick
Schwartz, Irving L.
Walter, Roderich
A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title_full A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title_fullStr A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title_full_unstemmed A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title_short A Sensitive Hydroosmotic Toad Bladder Assay : Affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
title_sort sensitive hydroosmotic toad bladder assay : affinity and intrinsic activity of neurohypophyseal peptides
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2225828/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5691711
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