Publications [#174084] of G. Allan Johnson

Papers Published
  1. DT Pals, S Thaisrivongs, JA Lawson, WM Kati, SR Turner, GL DeGraaf, DW Harris, GA Johnson, An orally active inhibitor of renin., Hypertension, vol. 8 no. 12 (December, 1986), pp. 1105-12 .

    Abstract:
    A potent renin inhibitor, U-71038 (Boc-Pro-Phe-N-MeHis-Leu psi[CHOHCH2]Val-Ile-Amp), was tested for oral effectiveness. Enzyme kinetic studies indicated that U-71038 was a competitive inhibitor of hog renin with an inhibitor constant (Ki) value of 12 nM. Intravenous as well as oral administration of U-71038 to anesthetized, ganglion-blocked rats infused with hog renin elicited dose-related hypotensive responses. Intravenous administration of U-71038 to conscious, sodium-depleted monkeys caused dose-related decreases of blood pressure and plasma renin activity without affecting heart rate. Similarly, the oral administration of U-71038 at 50 mg/kg to conscious, sodium-depleted monkeys elicited a pronounced hypotension and decrease in plasma renin activity that persisted for 5 hours. The hypotensive responses elicited by intravenous and oral administration of U-71038 to hog renin-infused rats and sodium-depleted monkeys were shown to be due entirely to inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system. A comparison of the results obtained after the intravenous administration of U-71038 with the results obtained after the oral administration of U-71038 implied that at least 10% of the orally administered U-71038 must have been absorbed to cause the observed effects in hog renin-infused rats and sodium-depleted monkeys. The studies demonstrated that an inhibitor of renin with a long duration of action and with oral effectiveness is a feasible entity.

Duke University * Arts & Sciences * Physics * Faculty * Staff * Grad * Researchers * Reload * Login
Copyright (c) 2001-2002 by Duke University Physics.