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    Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol. 1976 Mar-Apr;3(2):147-57.

    The interrelationships between antidiuretic hormone, adenyl cyclase, tissue cyclic AMP and diffusional water permeability.

    Abstract

    1. Physiological concentrations of antidiuretic hormone increase diffusional water permeability but not measurable cyclic AMP content in the isolated papilla of the rat's kidney. 2. Theophylline (6 mM) increases diffusional water permeability and cyclic AMP content in the isolated papilla of the rat's kidney. 3. The increase in water permeability is detected with 5 muunits.ml-1 of ADH and is maximal with 50 muunits.ml-1. The same maximum was achieved with 6 mM theophylline. 4. Cyclic AMP and dibutyryl cyclic AMP both increase water permeability, but to a lesser extent than theophylline or ADH. 5. In the presence of theophylline, ADH causes a dose related generation of tissue cyclic AMP up to a dose of 2,000,000 muunits.ml-1. 6. Adenyl cyclase is increasingly activated by ADH up to doses of 2,000,000 muunits.ml-1. 7. These results suggest that while ADH activates the adenyl cyclase system and changes water permeability there are sufficient disparities to cast doubt on an exclusive role for cyclic AMP as the second messenger.

    PMID:
    184992
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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