The pump, the exchanger, and the holy spirit: origins and 40-year evolution of ideas about the ouabain-Na+pump endocrine system

Author:

Blaustein Mordecai P.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Physiology and Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

Two prescient 1953 publications set the stage for the elucidation of a novel endocrine system: Schatzmann’s report that cardiotonic steroids (CTSs) are all Na+pump inhibitors, and Szent-Gyorgi’s suggestion that there is an endogenous “missing screw” in heart failure that CTSs like digoxin may replace. In 1977 I postulated that an endogenous Na+pump inhibitor acts as a natriuretic hormone and simultaneously elevates blood pressure (BP) in salt-dependent hypertension. This hypothesis was based on the idea that excess renal salt retention promoted the secretion of a CTS-like hormone that inhibits renal Na+pumps and salt reabsorption. The hormone also inhibits arterial Na+pumps, elevates myocyte Na+and promotes Na/Ca exchanger-mediated Ca2+gain. This enhances vasoconstriction and arterial tone—the hallmark of hypertension. Here I describe how those ideas led to the discovery that the CTS-like hormone is endogenous ouabain (EO), a key factor in the pathogenesis of hypertension and heart failure. Seminal observations that underlie the still-emerging picture of the EO-Na+pump endocrine system in the physiology and pathophysiology of multiple organ systems are summarized. Milestones include: 1) cloning the Na+pump isoforms and physiological studies of mutated pumps in mice; 2) discovery that Na+pumps are also EO-triggered signaling molecules; 3) demonstration that ouabain, but not digoxin, is hypertensinogenic; 4) elucidation of EO’s roles in kidney development and cardiovascular and renal physiology and pathophysiology; 5) discovery of “brain ouabain”, a component of a novel hypothalamic neuromodulatory pathway; and 6) finding that EO and its brain receptors modulate behavior and learning.

Funder

American Heart Association (AHA)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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