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Bristol Heart Institute, Bristol Royal Infirmary, University of Bristol, Bristol BS2 8HW, United Kingdom
Submitted 21 January 2003 ; accepted in final form 8 May 2003
Adenosine exerts a spectrum of energy-preserving actions on the heart
negative chronotropic effects. The pathways leading to adenosine formation
have remained controversial. In particular, although cytosolic
5'-nucleotidases can catalyze adenosine formation in cardiomyocytes,
their contribution to the actions of adenosine has not been documented
previously. We recently cloned two closely related AMP-preferring cytosolic
5'-nucleotidases (cN-IA and -IB); the A form predominates in the heart.
In this study, we overexpressed pigeon cN-IA in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes
using an adenovirus. cN-IA overexpression increased adenosine formation and
release into the medium caused by simulated hypoxia and by isoproterenol in
the absence and presence of inhibitors of adenosine metabolism. Adenosine
release was not affected by an ecto-5'-nucleotidase inhibitor,
,
-methylene-ADP, but was affected by a nucleoside transporter,
dipyridamole. The positive chronotropic effect of isoproterenol (130 ±3
vs. 100 ±4 beats/min) was inhibited (107 ±3 vs. 94 ±3
beats/min) in cells overexpressing cN-IA, and this was reversed by the
addition of the adenosine receptor antagonist
8-(p-sulfophenyl)theophilline (120 ± 3 vs. 90 ± 4
beats/min). Our results demonstrate that overexpressed cN-IA can be
sufficiently active in cardiomyocytes to generate physiologically effective
concentrations of adenosine at its receptors.
chronotropic effect; catecholamines; ATP metabolism
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