Synthetic human adrenomedullin and adrenomedullin 15-52 have potent short-lived vasodilator activity in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat.

1994 
Abstract Responses to synthetic human adrenomedullin, a novel hypotensive peptide isolated from human pheochromccytoma cells, and the carboxy terminal 15-52 amino acid fragment of adrenomedullin (ADM15-52) were investigated in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat under constant flow conditions. Intraarterial injections of the peptides in doses of 0.01–0.3 nmol caused dose-related decreases in hindlimb perfusion pressure. When compared on a nmol basis, adrenomedullin and ADM15-52 were similar to bradykinin in visodilator potency and were approximately 10 fold less potent than acetylcholine. The half-life of the vasodilator response to adrenomedullin and ADM15-52 ranged from 55 to 80 sec and was greater than the half-life of vasodilator responses to bradykinin in doses of 0.01–0.3 nmol and acetylcholine in doses of 0.01–0.3 nmol. The present data demonstrate that synthetic human adrenomedullin and ADM15-52 have potent but relatively short-lasting vasodilator activity in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat. These data suggest that amino acid residues 15-52 of adrenomedullin are important for the expression of vasodilator activity in the hindlimb vascular bed of the cat.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    9
    References
    28
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []