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The Biology of Vasopressin

Vasopressins are evolutionarily conserved peptide hormones. Mammalian vasopressin functions systemically as an antidiuretic and regulator of blood and cardiac flow essential for adapting to terrestrial environments. Moreover, vasopressin acts centrally as a neurohormone involved in social and parent...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sparapani, Samantha, Millet-Boureima, Cassandra, Oliver, Joshua, Mu, Kathy, Hadavi, Pegah, Kalostian, Tamar, Ali, Nazifa, Avelar, Carla Maria, Bardies, Marion, Barrow, Brenton, Benedikt, Minky, Biancardi, Giuliana, Bindra, Raminder, Bui, Lisa, Chihab, Zakaria, Cossitt, Ashley, Costa, Jeffrey, Daigneault, Tina, Dault, Jocelyn, Davidson, Isa, Dias, Jonathan, Dufour, Emie, El-Khoury, Sabine, Farhangdoost, Nargess, Forget, Anika, Fox, Alexa, Gebrael, Myriam, Gentile, Maria Concetta, Geraci, Olivia, Gnanapragasam, Ansley, Gomah, Elias, Haber, Elie, Hamel, Claudia, Iyanker, Thivya, Kalantzis, Christina, Kamali, Sara, Kassardjian, Elsa, Kontos, Hryssi Krissy, Le, Thi Bich Uyen, LoScerbo, Daniella, Low, Yan Fang, Mac Rae, Danielle, Maurer, Flore, Mazhar, Sana, Nguyen, Alice, Nguyen-Duong, Kathy, Osborne-Laroche, Chelsea, Park, Hwi Wun, Parolin, Emilie, Paul-Cole, Kahlila, Peer, Leah Sarah, Philippon, Margaux, Plaisir, Charles-Alexandre, Porras Marroquin, Jessica, Prasad, Simran, Ramsarun, Rewaparsad, Razzaq, Saad, Rhainds, Samantha, Robin, Damien, Scartozzi, Ryan, Singh, Davindra, Fard, Sajad Soleimani, Soroko, Maxim, Soroori Motlagh, Nastaran, Stern, Kiri, Toro, Laila, Toure, M. Wyatt, Tran-Huynh, Stephanie, Trépanier-Chicoine, Sarah, Waddingham, Claudia, Weekes, Aaliyah Jasmine, Wisniewski, Allison, Gamberi, Chiara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7832310/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33477721
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9010089
Descripción
Sumario:Vasopressins are evolutionarily conserved peptide hormones. Mammalian vasopressin functions systemically as an antidiuretic and regulator of blood and cardiac flow essential for adapting to terrestrial environments. Moreover, vasopressin acts centrally as a neurohormone involved in social and parental behavior and stress response. Vasopressin synthesis in several cell types, storage in intracellular vesicles, and release in response to physiological stimuli are highly regulated and mediated by three distinct G protein coupled receptors. Other receptors may bind or cross-bind vasopressin. Vasopressin is regulated spatially and temporally through transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms, sex, tissue, and cell-specific receptor expression. Anomalies of vasopressin signaling have been observed in polycystic kidney disease, chronic heart failure, and neuropsychiatric conditions. Growing knowledge of the central biological roles of vasopressin has enabled pharmacological advances to treat these conditions by targeting defective systemic or central pathways utilizing specific agonists and antagonists.