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Department of Nephrology and Hypertension, University Hospital Utrecht, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands
If, only 20 years ago, anyone had
postulated that the absence of nitric oxide gas (NO) would lead to
severe hypertension and destruction of the vascular bed of the kidney
within weeks, it is not unlikely that smiles of pity would have
appeared on the faces of fellow researchers. By now, this has become
common knowledge, and hundreds of reports have appeared on the
regulation of vascular and renal function by nitric oxide. The amount
of information complicates the design of a concept on how NO
participates in control of extracellular fluid volume (ECFV) by the
kidney. This review analyzes the function of endothelial and macula
densa NO synthase (NOS) in the regulation of renal function. From this analysis, endothelial NOS (eNOS)-derived NO is considered a modulator of vascular responses and of renal autoregulation in particular. Increases in renal perfusion pressure and sodium loading will increase
eNOS activity, resulting in vasodilatation and depression of
tubuloglomerular feedback system responsiveness. Endothelium-derived NO
seems important to buffer minute-to-minute variations in perfusion pressure and rapid changes in ANG II activity. In contrast, macula densa NOS is proposed to drive adaptations to long-term changes in
distal delivery and is considered a mediator of renin formation. Increases in perfusion pressure and distal delivery will depress the
activity and expression of the enzyme that coincides with, and possibly
mediates, diminished renin activity. Together, the opposite responses
of eNOS and macula densa NOS-derived NO to changes in ECFV lead to an
appropriate response to restore sodium balance. The concept that the
two enzymes with different localizations in the kidney and in the cell
are producing the same product, displaying contrasting responses to the
same stimulus but nevertheless exhibiting an integrated response to
perturbation of the most important regulated variable by the kidney,
i.e., the ECFV, may be applicable to other tissues.
renal function; autoregulation; tubuloglomerular feedback; angiotensin; nitric oxide; nitric oxide synthase; volume regulation
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