The benchmark experiments of Adolfo de Bold and Harald Sonnenberg revealed that heart atria contained a substance or substances (atrial natriuretic factor) which when injected into rats caused a profound diuresis, natriuresis, and fall in blood pressure. Acid extraction and purification of atrial natriuretic factor resulted initially in the purification of a low molecular weight peptide containing a disulfide bond. This peptide was named cardionatrin I. Amino acid sequencing of less than 1 nmol of cardionatrin I revealed it to be a 28-residue peptide with the following structure: [Formula: see text]The position of the disulfide bond was verified by a radioactive method. From the sequence of complementary DNA for atrial natriuretic factor, the 28-residue peptide was shown to be the C-terminal portion of a larger protein called pro-atrial natriuretic factor. The discovery and characterization of atrial natriuretic factor substantiated the idea that the heart atria serve in an endocrine capacity.