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Adenosine receptor interactions alter cardiac contractility in the rat heart. Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology [Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol] Journal article

 
TitleAdenosine receptor interactions alter cardiac contractility in the rat heart.
Author(s)Rose'meyer RB 
InstitutionSchool of Medical Sciences, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia, 4222.
SourceClin Exp Pharmacol Physiol 2009 Jun 29.
Abstract1. The effect of an adenosine (Ado) A(2) receptor agonist, N(6)-[2-(3,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-2-(2-methylphenyl)-ethyl]adenosine (DPMA) on AdoA(1) receptor mediated negative inotropic responses was investigated in rat heart. 2. Hearts from male Wistar rats (250-350g) were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit solution at constant flow in non-recirculating Langendorff mode. Hearts were paced at 5 Hz (5 ms duration, supramaximal voltage) via ventricular electrodes. After 30 mins equilibration (R)-N(6)-phenylisopropyl adenosine (R-PIA) concentration-response curves were acquired in the absence or presence of DPMA. 3. R-PIA induced concentration-dependent decreases in triple product (HR x left ventricular developed pressure x dP/dt(max)) in paced hearts. DPMA (1 nM) significantly attenuated R-PIA induced decreases in triple product, with a shift in pEC(50) from 8.0 +/- 0.51 (n=9) in control hearts to 6.63 +/- 1.03 (n=5) in treated tissues (P<0.05). The AdoA(2A)R antagonist 8-(3-chlorostyryl) caffeine (1 muM) and the adenylyl cyclase inhibitor cis-N-(2-phenylcyclopentyl)-azacyclotridec-1-en-2-amine hydrochloride (MDL12330A, 100nM) reversed the effect of DPMA on AdoA(1)R mediated negative inotropic actions while the adoA(2B)R inhibitor (alloxazine, 3 muM) had no effect on DPMA activity. 4. The results show that stimulation of AdoA(2)R attenuates AdoA(1)R dependent reductions in inotropic state. The adenosine receptor sub-type involved appears to be the AdoA(2A)R, and its action involves stimulation of adenylyl cyclase activity.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19566843