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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

RELEASE AND RENAL ACTIONS OF THE AVIAN ANTIDIURETIC HORMONE, ARGININE VASOTOCIN.

STALLONE, JOHN NICHOLAS. January 1984 (has links)
Recently developed radioimmunoassay (RIA) techniques were employed in a quantitative investigation of the release and renal actions of the avian antidiuretic hormone, arginine vasotocin (AVT) in the conscious domestic fowl. The investigation was composed of a series of three studies with goals to: (1) define the functional characteristics of the avian hypothalamo-neurohypophysial system (HNS) in terms of the extracellular osmotic and volemic stimuli that elicit release of AVT; (2) characterize responses of the HNS to the natural challenge of negative fluid balance; and (3) quantify the relative contributions of AVT-induced glomerular and tubular antidiuresis to the conservation of water by the avian kideny. Characterization of AVT secretion revealed that plasma osmolality (P(OSM)) is a primary determinant of AVT secretion by the HNS of the domestic fowl. Highly correlated and significant relationships between P(OSM) and plasma AVT (P(AVT)) exist both above and below the observed basal P(OSM) of normally hydrated birds. Analysis of the present data also suggested that the HNS is insensitive to changes in blood volume of 10% or less, since neither isotonic expansion nor reduction of blood volume altered P(AVT). The results of the fluid deprivation experiments indicate that AVT secretion is closely linked to the state of hydration during negative fluid balance in the domestic fowl. Analysis of the data indicated that increases in P(AVT) that occur with dehydration are mediated primarily by extracellular hyperosmolality and that the HNS is relatively insensitive to the simultaneous hypovolemia incurred with fluid deprivation. Comparison to the dose-response relationships between P(AVT) and glomerular and tubular mechanisms of antidiuresis over the entire range of physiological P(AVT) levels in the domestic fowl revealed that tubular mechanisms are of primary importance and glomerular mechanisms of secondary importance in the conservation of water by the avian kidney. The greatest proportion of the total AVT-induced reduction in renal water excretion occurred at low physiological P(AVT) levels and appeared to be the exclusive result of tubular mechanisms of antidiuresis. At high P(AVT) levels, glomerular and tubular mechanisms overlapped and their effects on water conservation could not be separated; however, only minor additional amounts of water were conserved by the combined actions of glomerular and tubular mechanisms. Thus glomerular mechanisms appear to have only a minor, secondary effect on water conserving ability of the avian kidney.
2

Interactions of neurohypophyseal, adrenergic and estrogenic agents on the canine cardiovascular system /

Desiderio, Mary Alice January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
3

Effects of cortisol, vasotocin and salinity on the expression of aquaporin-1 in silver sea bream Sparus sarba. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection

January 2010 (has links)
In the second part of our study, cDNA of AQP-1 and pro-vasotocin were cloned from the silver sea bream. An AQP-1 full clone was isolated from kidney and intestine and it consists of 904 bp with an open reading frame of 774 bp. The deduced amino sequence of sea bream AQP-1 shares highest identity with AQP-1a of gilthead sea bream (97.7%) and AQP-1a of other fish species (83.6% to 95.8%), however, considerably low identity was found between the silver sea bream AQP-1 and AQP-1b of gilthead sea bream (56%). The silver sea bream AQP-1 possesses basic features of a functional aquaporin and AQP-1, which includes two channel-forming asparagine-proline-alanine (NPA) signature motifs, six transmembrane domains, residues of the pore-forming region and a potential mercurial inhibiting site (Cys-178). The water channel was ubiquitously expressed in gills, liver, intestine, rectum, kidney, heart, urinary bladder and blood cells. A partial fragment of pro-vasotocin was isolated from hypothalamus of silver sea bream and consists of 184 bp, including encoding regions for the processing and amidation signal, vasotocin hormone and part of the neurophysin. / Lastly, single doses of cortisol (50 microg/g tissue) or vasotocin (1 microg/g tissue) were administered to seawater-acclimated sea bream with further three-day stabilizing period in seawater followed by an abrupt 6‰ exposure or administered to seawater transfer controls for three days. Cortisol markedly stimulated intestinal expression of AQP-1 in both the seawater transfer control and abrupt 6‰ transfer groups. Vasotocin treatment did not significantly modify AQP-1 expression in all tested organs. Hypothalamic pro-vasotocin expression levels were similar among different treatment groups. / Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis was used for studying the effect of salinity and hormones on expression of AQP-1 and pro-vasotocin. In the long-term salinity acclimation experiment, the sea bream were acclimated to six different salinity regimes (0‰, 6‰, 12‰, 33‰, 50‰, 70‰) for four weeks. The abundance of AQP-1 transcript was the highest in intestine of 70‰-acclimated fish among different salinity groups and there was also a statistically significant increase in 12‰-acclimated fish. Branchial AQP-1 expression was significantly upregulated in sea bream acclimated to freshwater. In contrast, the hypothalamic pro-vasotocin expression was significantly downregulated during freshwater acclimation. In addition, the sea bream were also subjected to an abrupt 6%o transfer at different time intervals (2, 6, 12, 72 and 168 hours). RT-PCR analysis revealed there was a transient decrease in branchial AQP-1 expression two hours after abrupt hypo-osmotic exposure and the expression levels subsequently returned to the seawater control levels. The expression levels of hypothalamic pro-vasotocin were not significantly altered by the abrupt exposure treatment. / The present experiments investigated the effects of salinity and hormones on the relative expression of hypothalamic pro-vasotocin, and aquaporin-1 (AQP-1) in intestine, gills and kidney of the silver sea bream Sparus sarba. With the use of immunohistochemical techniques, immunoreactivity of AQP-1 was detected at the basal side of enterocytes and gill chloride cells, and at the apical brush border of kidney tubules whereas AQP-3 was only localized in similar positions in the gills and intestines. AQP-1 was relatively more ubiquitous than AQP-3 and was localized with same cell types as the electrogenic Na+-K+-ATPase in gills and kidney. / The present study had demonstrated the responsiveness of intestinal and branchial AQP-1 expressions of the silver sea bream to environmental salinity perturbations. Further to this, cortisol was observed to upregulate the transcription of AQP-1 in the intestine. Pro-vasotocin expression was altered by long-term salinity adaptation, however, the linkage of this alteration to AQP-1 functioning in different osmoregulatory organs is yet to be elucidated. / Luk, Chun Yin. / Adviser: Norman Y. S. Woo. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 72-04, Section: B, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 200-222). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest Information and Learning Company, [200-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract also in Chinese.

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