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Publication : Genetic models reveal that brain natriuretic peptide can signal through different tissue-specific receptor-mediated pathways.

First Author  Chusho H Year  2000
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  141
Issue  10 Pages  3807-13
PubMed ID  11014237 Mgi Jnum  J:108806
Mgi Id  MGI:3624911 Doi  10.1210/endo.141.10.7692
Citation  Chusho H, et al. (2000) Genetic models reveal that brain natriuretic peptide can signal through different tissue-specific receptor-mediated pathways. Endocrinology 141(10):3807-13
abstractText  Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), a hormone produced primarily by the cardiac ventricle, is thought to be involved in a variety of homeostatic processes through its cognate receptor, guanylyl cyclase A (GC-A). We previously created transgenic mice overexpressing BNP under the control of the liver-specific human serum amyloid P component promoter (BNP-transgenic mice) and demonstrated that they exhibit reduced blood pressure and cardiac weight accompanied by an elevation of plasma cGMP concentrations and marked skeletal overgrowth through the activation of endochondral ossification. To address whether BNP exerts its biological effects solely through GC-A, we produced BNP-transgenic mice lacking GC-A (BNP-Tg/GC-A-/- mice) and examined their cardiovascular and skeletal phenotypes. The GC-A-/- mice are hypertensive with cardiac hypertrophyrelative to wild-type littermates, which is not alleviated by overexpression of BNP in BNP-Tg/GC-A-/- mice. The BNP-Tg/GC-A-/- mice, however, continue to exhibit marked longitudinal growth of vertebrae and long bones comparably to BNP-Tg mice. This study provides genetic evidence that BNP reduces blood pressure and cardiac weight through GC-A, whereas it dramatically alters endochondral ossification in the absence of this receptor. Therefore, the BNP-Tg/GC-A-/- mice provide the first experimental model demonstrating that this natriuretic peptide can signal in a tissue-specific manner through a receptor other than GC-A.
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