1 Kinins were measured by a radioimmunoassay in the inflammatory exudates induced by carrageenin or zymosan in the peritoneal cavity of normal Wistar rats and of kininogen-deficient Brown Norway rats. 2 After administration of carrageenin to normal rats, levels of immunoreactive kinins showed a single peak during the first two hours and then decreased. The presence of kinins preceded and accompanied the exudation of '25I-labelled albumin. Kinins were identified as bradykinin by chromatography. 2 Captopril, an inhibitor of kininase 2, increased the level of kinins and the volume of the exudates after carrageenin treatment. In Brown Norway rats, the volume of the exudates was small and contained little or undetectable amounts of immunoreactive kinins. 4 During zymosan-induced peritonitis, the exudates were devoid of immunoreactive kinins in both species. The volume of the exudates was larger in kininogen-deficient rats than in normal rats. 5 We conclude that in rats, the kinin system is a major factor responsible for the development of the inflammatory reactions induced by carrageenin, but is not involved in the reactions induced by zymosan.
summaryInsulin sensitivity of kininogen-deficient rats was compared with that of normal rats using euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic glucose clamping. Anaesthetized animals were infused with 2-50 mU kg¢ min¢ of insulin and the glucose infusion rates needed to maintain euglycaemia were determined. Maximum glucose uptake, insulin sensitivity index and insulin clearance were reduced in kininogen-deficient rats. Captopril increased the amount of glucose needed to maintain euglycaemia during infusion of 2 and 10 mU kg¢ min¢ of insulin in normal rats, but had no effect in kininogen-deficient rats. Anaesthetized rats of both strains were given an intraperitoneal injection of glucose and the evolution of blood glucose was followed for 120 min. The peak increase was higher in kininogen-deficient rats. Similar larger increases in blood glucose were observed after glucose injection in normal rats previously treated with HOE 140, a bradykinin Bµ receptor antagonist. After glucose injection, plasma insulin increased in both groups of rats but reached lower levels in kininogen-deficient animals. These results suggest that bradykinin is involved not only in the clearance of glucose and insulin by the tissues during insulin infusion but also that bradykinin can affect the release of insulin after a glucose load.
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