Affiliation:
1. From the Institut für Biochemie und Endokrinologie, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen (B.S., U.K., W.S.), and Medizinische Poliklinik Münster, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster (M.T., W.Z.) (Germany).
Abstract
Abstract
Endogenous digitalis-like factors in humans are presumably cardenolides and bufadienolides. To test whether bufadienolide-like substances may circulate in human blood, we used antibodies from rabbits against the bufadienolide proscillaridin A to measure the concentration of cross-reacting material in human plasma with an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. IgG had an apparent affinity of 2×10
−9
mol/L for proscillaridin A. It was specific for bufadienolides and did not cross-react with cardenolides or several steroid hormones. Extraction of human plasma with ethanol and fractionation of this extract over a high-performance liquid chromatographic reverse-phase C18 column with a propanol/isopropanol gradient resulted in the separation of three peaks of increasing hydrophobicity (ED
1
, ED
2
, ED
3
) that inhibited the sodium pump of human red blood cells and cross-reacted with proscillaridin A antibodies. The concentration of the proscillaridin A immunoreactivity ED
1
in normotensive subjects had a geometric mean of 0.1 nmol/L, with a dispersion factor of 8.77. ED
1
correlated positively in a group of 60 normotensive subjects, 22 patients with hypertension, and 19 patients with chronic renal failure with mean arterial blood pressure (log ED
1
[nmol/L]=0.013×mm Hg−2.17,
r
=.25,
P
<.05), systolic pressure (log ED
1
[nmol/L]=0.010×mm Hg−2.23,
r
=.32,
P
<.01), and pulse pressure (log ED
1
[nmol/L]=0.019×mm Hg−1.80,
r
=.38,
P
<.0001). There was no correlation with other parameters of the donors. We conclude that several substances cross-reacting with proscillaridin A antibodies and inhibiting the sodium pump of human red blood cells circulate in human blood. The level of one of these substances (ED
1
) correlates with mean arterial and pulse pressures.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
62 articles.
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