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Publication : Tubuloglomerular feedback in ACE-deficient mice.

First Author  Traynor T Year  1999
Journal  Am J Physiol Volume  276
Issue  5 Pt 2 Pages  F751-7
PubMed ID  10330057 Mgi Jnum  J:56143
Mgi Id  MGI:1340152 Doi  10.1152/ajprenal.1999.276.5.F751
Citation  Traynor T, et al. (1999) Tubuloglomerular feedback in ACE-deficient mice. Am J Physiol 276(5 Pt 2):F751-7
abstractText  In these experiments, we used a strain of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) germline null mutant mice, generated by J. H. Krege and co-workers (JH Krege, SWM John, LL Langenbach, J B Hodgin, JR Hagaman, ES Bachman, JC Jennette, DA O'Brien, and O Smithies. Nature 375:146-8, 1995), to examine the effect of chronic ACE deficiency on the magnitude of tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) responses. The genotype was determined by PCR on DNA extracted from the tail and was verified after each experiment by assessment of the blood pressure response to an injection of ANG I. To assess TGF responsiveness, we determined the change in stop-flow pressure (PSF) caused by increasing NaCl concentration at the macula densa by using micropuncture techniques. When loop of Henle flow rate was increased from 0 to 40 nl/min, PSF fell from a mean of 42.3 +/- 1.95 to 33.6 +/- 2.09 mmHg (n = 6, P = 0.005) in wild-type mice (+/+), fell from 40.6 +/- 2.35 to 38.6 +/- 1.93 mmHg in heterozygous (+/-) mice (n = 7, P = 0.014), and did not change in homozygous ACE (-/-) mice [36.7 +/- 2.02 mmHg vs. 36.4 +/- 2.01 mmHg; n = 4, P = not significant (NS)]. During an infusion of ANG II at a dose that did not significantly elevate blood pressure (70 ng. kg-1. min-1), TGF response magnitude (PSF 0 - PSF 40) increased from 6.5 +/- 1.4 to 9.8 +/- 1.19 mmHg in +/+ (P = 0.006), from 1.14 +/- 0.42 to 4.6 +/- 1.3 mmHg in +/- (P = 0.016), and from 0.42 +/- 0.25 to 4.02 +/- 1.06 in -/- mice (P = 0.05). Absence of TGF responses in ACE null mutant mice and restoration of near-normal responses during an acute infusion of ANG II supports previous conclusions that ANG II is an essential component in the signal transmission pathway that links the macula densa with the glomerular vascular pole.
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