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Medicinal Chemistry

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1573-4064
ISSN (Online): 1875-6638

Serum Specific Vasopressin-Degrading Activity is Related to Blood Total Cholesterol Levels in Men but not in Women

Author(s): Ramirez-Exposito Maria Jesus, Arrazola Marcelina, Carrera-Gonzalez Maria Pilar, Arias de Saavedra Jose Manuel, Sanchez-Agesta Rafael, Mayas Maria Dolores and Martinez-Martos Jose Manuel

Volume 8, Issue 4, 2012

Page: [749 - 752] Pages: 4

DOI: 10.2174/157340612801216328

Price: $65

Abstract

The role of vasopressin (AVP) in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease is controversial, but this peptide hormone is elevated in heart failure and some forms of hypertension. Also, AVP has vasoconstrictor, mitogenic, hyperplasic and renal fluid retaining properties which, by analogy with angiotensin II, may have deleterious effects when present in chronic excess. Furthermore, cholesterol blood levels are also associated with hypertension, although the underlying mechanism is not known. Here we analyze the relationship between blood total cholesterol levels and serum vasopressin- degrading cystyl-aminopeptidase activity (AVP-DA) in healthy humans, and the differences between men and women. Linear correlation coefficients were calculated to test relationships between AVP-DA and blood total cholesterol levels. Sex differences were observed for AVP-DA, being this activity higher in men than in women. According to the linear model of the regression analysis, AVP-DA showed a significant negative correlation with blood total cholesterol levels in men, whereas no correlation was observed in women. Several studies in humans demonstrate the existence of greater plasma AVP concentrations in normal men compared to normal women, which could explain the genderdifferences observed in the present work in relation with AVP-DA. However, AVP-DA is related to blood cholesterol levels only in men, although in our hands, women showed higher blood cholesterol levels than men. This could indicate that the risk of high cholesterol-related hypertension is more probable in men than in women. Although AVP-DA misregulation could be involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension, its relation with cholesterol levels appears only in men, but not in women.

Keywords: Vasopressin, total cholesterol, gender differences, human, hypertension, renal fluid retaining, cardiovascular disease, hormone, vasoconstrictor, mitogenic


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