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Chronobiology International
The Journal of Biological and Medical Rhythm Research
Volume 8, 1991 - Issue 5
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Original Article

Food Intake and Body Positional Change Alter the Circadian Rhythm of Atrial Natriuretic Peptides Excretion into Human Urine

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Pages 373-384 | Received 11 Feb 1991, Accepted 22 May 1991, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The 98 amino acid (a.a.) N-terminus of the 126 a.a. atrial natriuretic factor prohormone contains two natriuretic and vasodilatory peptides consisting of a.a. 1–30 (proANF 1–30) and a.a. 31–67 (proANF 31–67). The N-terminus and C-terminus (a.a. 99–126, i.e., ANF–also a vasodilatory peptide) circulate normally in humans with a circadian peak at 04:00 h in plasma. To determine if the N-terminus and C-terminus of the ANF prohormone are present in urine and possibly have a circadian variation in urine, six healthy volunteers had urine samples hourly while awake and every 3 h during sleep for five consecutive days obtained for radioimmunoassay. The sleep-awake pattern was varied so that after 2 days of normal sleep (supine)-awake (upright) positions, these volunteers were supine from 15:00 h on the third day until 10:00 h of the fourth day. They were then upright until 19:00 h that day when they became supine again until 02:30 h, and then were upright until 10:00 h of day 5. Three radioimmunoassays that immunologically recognize (a) the whole N-terminus (i.e., amino acids 1–98), (b) the midportion of the N-terminus (amino acids 31–67), and (c) the C-terminus of the ANF prohormone were utilized. ProANF 1–98, proANF 31–67, and the ANF radioimmunoassays each detected their respective peptides in urine. A circadian peak for each of these peptides was detected at 04:00 to 05:00 h whether the person was supine or upright during the night, which were significantly (p < 0.001) higher than their concentrations in the afternoon of the previous days. Assuming a supine position during the day caused a significant (p < 0.01) two- to threefold increase in these peptides in the urine. Food intake also increased the concentrations of proANF 1–98, proANF 31–67, and ANF in urine (p < 0.001). Fluid intake when abstaining from food throughout the day lowered the concentration of these peptides in the urine. It was concluded that there is a circadian rhythm in both the N-terminus and C-terminus of the ANF prohormone excretion into urine with a peak at 04:00 h irrespective of posture, but that both posture and food and fluid intake throughout the day significantly influence the excretion of these peptides into the urine, with supine posture and food increasing their concentrations in the urine while fluid intake decreases their concentrations in the urine.

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