hidden pixel

Kinin System Information

The kinin-kallikrein system or simply kinin system is a poorly understood system[1] of blood proteins that plays a role in inflammation, blood pressure control, coagulation and pain. Its important mediators bradykinin and kallidin are vasodilators and act on many cell types.

Contents

History

The system was discovered in 1909 (Abelous & Bardier) when researchers discovered that injection with urine (high in kinins) led to hypotension (low blood pressure).[2] The researchers Emil Karl Frey, Heinrich Kraut and Eugen Werle discovered high-molecular weight kininogen in urine around 1930.[3]

Etymology: kinin [Gk] kīn(eîn) to move, set in motion. kallikrein [Gk ] kalli~ sweet and krein = kreos, flesh, named for the pancreatic extracts where it was first discovered

Members

The system consists of a number of large proteins, some small polypeptides and a group of enzymes that activate and deactivate the compounds.

Proteins

High-molecular weight kininogen (HMWK) and low-molecular weight kininogen (LMWK) are precursors of the polypeptides. They have no activity of themselves.

Polypeptides

HMWK and LMWK are formed by alternative splicing of the same gene.[4]

Enzymes

Pharmacology

Inhibition of ACE with ACE inhibitors leads to decreased conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II (a vasoconstrictor) but also to an increase in bradykinin due to decreased degradation. This explains why some patients of ACEi's develop a dry cough, and some react with angioedema, a dangerous swelling of the head and neck region.

There are hypotheses that many of the ACE-inhibitors' beneficial effects are due to their influence on the kinin-kallikrein system. This includes their effects in arterial hypertension, in ventricular remodeling (after myocardial infarction) and possibly diabetic nephropathy.

Role in disease

Defects of the kinin-kallikrein system in diseases are not generally recognized. The system is the subject of much research due to its relationship to the inflammation and blood pressure systems. It is known that kinins are inflammatory mediators that cause dilation of blood vessels and increased vascular permeability. Kinins are small peptides produced from kininogen by kallikrein and are broken down by kininases. They act on phospholipase and increase arachidonic acid release and thus prostaglandin (PGE2) production.

C1-INH Involvement

C1-inhibitor is a serine protease inhibitor (serpin) protein. C1-INH is the most important physiological inhibitor of plasma kallikrein, fXIa and fXIIa. C1-INH also inhibits proteinases of the fibrinolytic, clotting, and kinin pathways. Deficiency of C1-INH permits plasma kallikrein activation, which leads to the production of the vasoactive peptide bradykinin.

References

  1. ^ Seth (1 January 2008). Textbook Of Pharmacology. Elsevier India. pp. 603–. ISBN 9788131211588. http://books.google.com/books?id=51ozlZRBvQwC&pg=SL603-PA13. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
  2. ^ Abelous JE, Bardier E (1909). "Les substances hypotensives de l'urine humaine normale" (in French). CR Soc Biol 66: 511–20.
  3. ^ Kraut H, Frey EK, Werle E (1930). "Der Nachweis eines Kreislaufhormon in der Pankreasdrüse". Hoppe-Seylers Z Physiol Chem 189: 97–106. doi:10.1515/bchm2.1930.189.3-4.97. http://www.reference-global.com/doi/abs/10.1515/bchm2.1930.189.3-4.97.
  4. ^ Goodman & Gilman's Pharmacology; Chapter 24. Histamine, Bradykinin, and Their Antagonists
  5. ^ Stefan Offermanns; Walter Rosenthal (2008). Encyclopedia of Molecular Pharmacology. Springer. pp. 673–. ISBN 9783540389163. http://books.google.com/books?id=iwwo5gx8aX8C&pg=PA673. Retrieved 11 December 2010.
  6. ^ Kumar, V., Abbas, A., Fausto, N. (Editors) Robbins and Cotran pathologic basis of disease. 7the ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier 2005;Page 65.

External links

· · Cardiovascular system, physiology: cardiovascular physiology
Heart
Volumes

Stroke volume = End-diastolic volumeEnd-systolic volume

Cardiac output = Heart rate × Stroke volume

Afterload · Preload

Frank–Starling law of the heart · Cardiac function curve · Venous return curve

Aortic valve area calculation · Ejection fraction · Cardiac index
Dimensions Fractional shortening = (End-diastolic dimensionEnd-systolic dimension) / End-diastolic dimension
Interaction diagrams Cardiac cycle · Wiggers diagram · Pressure volume diagram
Tropism Chronotropic (Heart rate) · Dromotropic (Conduction velocity) · Inotropic (Contractility) · Bathmotropic (Excitability) · Lusitropic (Relaxation)
Conduction system / Cardiac electrophysiology Cardiac action potential (Atrial action potential, Ventricular action potential) · Effective refractory period · Pacemaker potential · EKG (P wave, PR interval, QRS complex, QT interval, ST segment, T wave, U wave) · Hexaxial reference system
Chamber pressure Central venous pressure/right atrial pressureRight ventricular pressurePulmonary artery pressurePulmonary wedge pressure/left atrial pressureLeft ventricular pressureAortic pressure
Other Ventricular remodeling
Vascular system/ Hemodynamics
Blood flow Compliance · Vascular resistance (Total peripheral resistance) · Pulse · Perfusion
Blood pressure

Pulse pressure (Systolic - Diastolic) · Mean arterial pressure

Jugular venous pressure

Portal venous pressure
Regulation of BP Baroreflex · Kinin-kallikrein system · Renin-angiotensin system · Vasoconstrictors/Vasodilators · Autoregulation (Myogenic mechanism, Tubuloglomerular feedback) · Paraganglia (Aortic body, Carotid body, Glomus cell)

: HRT

//

//, /,

, drug (///),

: VAS

(a:////,v:////)////

////, /,

, drug(+//////)

Categories: Kinin system | Cardiovascular physiology

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sun Sep 11 11:23:28 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.