Mechanism of Action

Adam J. Brown, MD

Discover how modern medicine was built. This podcast explores the careful, often overlooked history of how doctors and scientists identified diseases, uncovered their secrets in the lab, and developed treatments that transformed lives. Join us to appreciate the work behind the medicines we rely on today.

Episodes

  1. Mar 12

    Breaking the RAAS Cycle: ACE Inhibition in Heart and Kidney Disease

    From the discovery of a mysterious blood-pressure–lowering effect in the venom of a Brazilian pit viper to the development of the first ACE inhibitor, we trace how scientists transformed a deadly toxin into lifesaving medicine. We follow the work that identified bradykinin-potentiating peptides in snake venom and revealed that angiotensin-converting enzyme could be blocked—leading to the creation of captopril and later drugs such as enalapril and lisinopril. Along the way, landmark experiments and clinical trials showed that ACE inhibitors do far more than lower blood pressure, reshaping the treatment of heart failure and chronic kidney disease by targeting maladaptive activation of the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system. Chapters (00:00:00) - ACE Inhibitor Story Continues: Shutting off RAAS(00:01:00) - Recap: The RAAS Refresher(00:02:36) - Venom Mystery : Why Pit Viper Bites Cause Hypotension(00:05:02) - Venom and the ACE Connection: John Vane's Lab(00:06:20) - Interview With a Pit Viper: Snake’s Take on Pharma(00:09:18) - Venom Into Medicine: Turning Raw Venom into a Drug(00:10:04) - Captopril: The First ACE Inhibitor(00:11:04) - Better ACE Inhibitors: Captopril to Enalapril to Lisinopril(00:12:35) - Maladaptive RAAS Activation: Heart Failure Activates Renin(00:19:36) - Maladaptive RAAS Activation: Kidney Failure Activates Renin(00:24:24) - Episode Conclusion: ACE Inhibitors Transform Cardiorenal Medicine

    27 min
  2. Feb 11

    ACE Inhibitors, RAAS Physiology, and Snake Venom: Renin, Angiotensin, and Kidney Blood Pressure Control

    From grinding up kidneys and injecting the extracts into animals to the famous Goldblatt clamp experiment, we trace decades of bold science that uncovered the body's most elaborate blood pressure system piece by piece. In part one of a two-part story, we follow the kidney's rise from simple filter to master regulator — through the discovery of renin, the bitter 17-year naming rivalry between Buenos Aires and Cleveland, and the identification of the enzyme that activates it all. Along the way, we encounter a Brazilian pit viper whose venom holds a molecular clue to one of modern medicine's greatest breakthroughs. Chapters (00:00:00) - ACE Inhibitors: A Two-Part Story Begins(00:01:00) - Catching Up: Hypertension, Early Treatments, and Accidental Drugs(00:02:35) - What Is an ACE Inhibitor?(00:03:27) - Step-by-Step RAAS: Renin → Angiotensin → Aldosterone(00:05:43) - Enter the Brazilian Pit Viper: Venom and Hypotension(00:07:45) - Dr. Richard Bright and the Kidney–Heart Connection(00:09:13) - Tigerstedt and the Discovery of Renin(00:10:27) - Wild Inspiration: Brown-Séquard’s Influence(00:11:36) - Rabbit Kidney Extracts and a Pressor Substance(00:13:52) - Goldblatt’s Clip: Renal Ischemia Causes Hypertension(00:16:45) - Buenos Aires Group: What Is the Kidney Secreting?(00:19:00) - Hypertensin vs. Angiotonin: Two Names, One Substance(00:22:09) - Dr. Skeggs: Angiotensin I vs II(00:23:30) - Sodium Chloride and the Hint of ACE(00:24:05) - Recap and Tease for Part Two

    25 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Discover how modern medicine was built. This podcast explores the careful, often overlooked history of how doctors and scientists identified diseases, uncovered their secrets in the lab, and developed treatments that transformed lives. Join us to appreciate the work behind the medicines we rely on today.

You Might Also Like