The nerves of the juxtaglomerular apparatus of man and other mammals contain the potent peptide NPY
- PMID: 6207149
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00495438
The nerves of the juxtaglomerular apparatus of man and other mammals contain the potent peptide NPY
Abstract
The juxtaglomerular apparatus, a neuroendocrine unit located in the vascular pole of the glomerulus and influencing blood pressure by the secretion of renin, is known to have a rich supply of monoaminergic nerve fibres. Neuropeptide Tyrosine (NPY), a newly discovered, potent, vasoconstrictor peptide of 36 amino acids, has been found by immunocytochemistry to be present in a dense plexus of fibres around the juxtaglomerular apparatus of man, monkey, mouse, hamster, rat and guinea pig. NPY-immunoreactivity was markedly depleted after chemical sympathectomy by 6-hydroxydopamine. The concentration of NPY within the whole mouse kidney was 29.6 +/- 6.8 pmol/g and fractionation of the extracts demonstrated that the NPY-like immunoreactivity co-eluted from the column in the same position as the porcine NPY standard. The role of this peptide in renal physiology and pathology now needs urgent investigation.
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