Bradykinin is a physiologically and pharmacologically active peptide of the kinin group of proteins, consisting of nine amino acids.
Structure
The
amino acid sequence of bradykinin is:
arg -
pro -
pro -
gly -
phe -
ser -
pro -
phe -
arg. Its empirical formula is therefore C
50H
73N
15O
11.
Synthesis
The activity of the
kinin-kallikrein system makes bradykinin by
proteolytic cleavage of its kininogen precursor,
high-molecular weight kininogen (HMWK), using the kininogenase
enzyme.
Metabolism
In humans, bradykinin is broken down by three kininases: Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE), aminopeptidase P (APP), and carboxypeptidase N (CPN), which cleave the 7-8, 1-2, and 8-9 positions, respectively .
Physiological role
Effects
Bradykinin is a potent
endothelium-dependent
vasodilator, causes contraction of non-vascular
smooth muscle, increases vascular
permeability and also is involved in the mechanism of
pain. In some aspects, it has similar actions to that of
histamine, and like histamine is released from
venules rather than
arterioles.
Receptors
In
mammals, two types of bradykinin
receptors are known. The B
1 receptor is only expressed as a result of tissue injury, and is presumed to play a role in chronic pain. The B
2 receptor is constitutively active and participates in bradykinin's vasodilatory role.
History
Bradykinin was discovered by three
Brazilian physiologists and pharmacologists working at the
Instituto de Biologia de São Paulo, in
São Paulo city, led by Dr.
Maurício Rocha e Silva. Together with colleagues
Wilson Teixeira Beraldo and
Gastão Rosenfeld they discovered in 1948 its powerful
hypotensive effects in
animal preparations. Bradykinin was detected in the
blood plasma of animals after the addition of
venom of
Bothrops jararaca (Brazilian
lancehead snake), which was brought by Rosenfeld from the
Butantan Institute. This discovery was part of a continuing study on circulatory
shock and
proteolytic enzymes related to the
toxicology of snake bites, started by Rocha e Silva as early as 1939. Bradykinin was to prove a new
autopharmacological principle, i.e., a substance that is released in the body by a metabolic modification from precursors, which are pharmacologically active. According to B.J. Hagwood, Rocha e Silva's biographer, "The discovery of bradykinin has led to a new understanding of many physiological and pathological phenomena including circulatory shock induced by venoms and toxins."
Applications
The practical importance of the discovery of bradykinin became apparent when one of his collaborators at the
Medical School of Ribeirão Preto at the University of São Paulo, Dr.
Sérgio Henrique Ferreira, discovered a
bradykinin potentiating factor (BPF) in the bothropic venom which increases powerfully both the duration and magnitude of its effects on vasodilation and the consequent fall in
blood pressure. On the basis of this finding,
Squibb scientists developed the first of a new generation of highly-effective anti-hypertensive drugs, the so-called
ACE inhibitors, such as
captopril (trademarked Capoten), which have saved many lives since.
References
- Dendorfer A, Wolfrum S, Wagemann M, Qadri F, Dominiak P. Pathways of bradykinin degradation in blood and plasma of normotensive and hypertensive rats. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 2001;280:H2182-8. Fulltext. PMID 11299220.
- Kuoppala A, Lindstedt KA, Saarinen J, Kovanen PT, Kokkonen JO. Inactivation of bradykinin by angiotensin-converting enzyme and by carboxypeptidase N in human plasma. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 2000;278(4):H1069-74. Fulltext. PMID 10749699.
Peptide hormones | Kinin system | Pharmacology | Bradykinin | ブラジキニン | Bradicinina