Role of parathyroid hormone in the phosphaturia of extracellular fluid volume expansion. Acute expansion of the extracellular fluid volume increases the urinary excretion of phosphate. The present study examined the importance of increased plasma parathyroid hormone concentration in the phosphaturia accompanying acute extracellular fluid volume expansion (ECVE). Infusion of a calcium-free Ringer's solution into dogs was associated with increased urinary phosphateexcretion and serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone concentration (iPTH), the latter being significantly correlated with a decrease in plasma ionized calcium concentration. Prevention of the fall in plasma ionized calcium concentration by infusion of a calcium containing Ringer's solution prevented the increase in serum iPTH but the magnitude of the phosphaturia was not affected.
The relative biologic activities of native human parathyroid hormone, hPTH (1-84), native bovine parathyroid hormone, bPTH (1-84), and their respective synthetic, NH2-terminal, biologically-active (1-34) fragments were compared in vitro using adenylate cyclase preparations from human, chicken, and rat renal cortex. The concentrations of the hormones required for half-maximal stimulation of the enzymes were determined from dose response curves. bPTH (1-84) had greater apparent activity than hPTH (1-84), using rat or chicken renal adenylate cyclase, but, with human renal adenylate cyclase, the apparent activities of the two hormones were equal. Synthetic hPTH (1-34) possessed about 1/10 of the apparent activity of hPTH (1-84) in all three adenylate cyclase systems. However, (GLU22)bPTH (1-34) was about equal inapparent activity to bPTH (1-84) in the three systems. We propose that different rates of hormone degradation at or near renal receptor sites may be responsible for the dependence of the relative biologic activity on the assay system used. In the case of hPTH a peptide chain longer than (1-34) may be required for the full biologic activity of the hormone...
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