RELEASE OF A PROSTAGLANDIN E-LIKE SUBSTANCE FROM CANINE KIDNEY BY BRADYKININ - COMPARISON WITH ELEDOISIN

Abstract
Renal vasodilation produced by two dissimilar vasodepressor polypeptides, bradykinin and eledoisin, was correlated with changes in renal venous concentrations of substances having the properties of prostaglandins of the E and F series in anesthetized dogs. Samples of renal venous blood were extracted for acidic lipids, and the prostaglandin E and prostaglandin F zones of the chromatographed extracts were eluted and assayed in vitro for prostaglandins of the E and F series by a parallel bioassay system (sensitivity 0.015 ng/ml blood). During the first 2 minutes of infusion, bradykinin increased the concentration of a prostaglandin E-like substance in renal venous blood from a mean control level of 0.16 ng/ml to 1.05 ng/ml (P<0.01); this increase occurred simultaneously with the greatest increase in renal blood flow to 432 ml/min from a control value of 282 ml/min. After 12 minutes of bradykinin infusion, the concentration of the prostaglandin E-like substance had decreased to 0.30 ng/ml, and renal blood flow had fallen to 398 ml/min. In contrast, eledoisin infused in equidilator doses did not increase the concentration of the prostaglandin E-like substance. The concentration of prostaglandin F-like substances was not affected by either polypeptide. A transient increase in urine flow occurred during the first 2 minutes of bradykinin infusion only. These results suggest that a prostaglandin E-like substance participates in the renal vasodilator and the diuretic responses to bradykinin.