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In vivo renal production and tubular secretion of tyramine

JW Van Huysse, DP Henry and LR Willis

Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.

Para-tyramine (p-TYM) is a predominant urinary amine in humans, rabbit, rat and dog, and its urinary excretion rate may reflect central nervous system pathophysiology. However, the source of urinary p-TYM is not known, nor have the mechanisms regulating its excretion been characterized. The present study, by using renal clearance techniques, examined the sources of urinary p-TYM and the mechanism of excretion in anesthetized rabbits. In all studies, the renal clearance of p-TYM was compared with that of norepinephrine (NE). Base-line delivery to the kidney of p-TYM in plasma was 8.6 +/- 1.6 ng/min (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 16), whereas the mean urinary excretion rate of p-TYM was 26.5 +/- 3.6 ng/min during the same period (P < .001 vs. delivery). In three separate series of experiments, either vehicle (n = 5) or a specific inhibitor of renal tubular organic cation secretion, cyanine 863 (6 mg/kg, n = 7), or a specific inhibitor of aromatic-amino acid- decarboxylase, alpha-mono-fluoromethyldopa (FMD, 4 mg/kg, n = 5), were infused i.v., Mean arterial pressure, glomerular filtration rate, renal plasma flow and urine flow rate were unchanged in all studies. The renal clearances of p-TYM (Cp-TYM) and NE (CNE) were unchanged only after vehicle. After cyanine 863, Cp-TYM was decreased to 36% of control (P < .01), whereas CNE decreased to 21% of its base-line value (P < .01). After FMD Cp-TYM was reduced to 2% of control (P < .05), whereas CNE decreased by 44% (P < .01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Volume 272, Issue 3, pp. 1187-1192, 03/01/1995
Copyright © 1995 by American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics







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Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.