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First published online on August 23, 2002.
Copyright © 2002 by The Physiological Society
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Received May 1, 2002
Accepted after revision July 10, 2002

INTERACTIONS OF ADENOSINE, PROSTAGLANDINS AND NITRIC OXIDE IN HYPOXIA-INDUCED VASODILATATION: IN VIVO AND IN VITRO STUDIES

Janice M. Marshall1*, Clare J. Ray1, Mark R. Abbas1, and Andrew M. Coney1

1 Department of Physiology, The Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: j.m.marshall{at}bham.ac.uk.

Adenosine, prostaglandins (PG) and nitric oxide (NO) have all been implicated in hypoxia-evoked vasodilatation. We investigated whether their actions are interdependent. In anaesthetised rats, the PG synthesis inhibitors diclofenac or indomethacin reduced muscle vasodilatation evoked by systemic hypoxia or adenosine, but not that evoked by iloprost, a stable analogue of prostacyclin (PGI2), or by an NO donor. After diclofenac, the A1 receptor agonist CCPA evoked no vasodilatation: we previously showed that A1, but not A2A, receptors mediate the hypoxia-induced muscle vasodilatation. Further, in freshly excised rat aorta, adenosine evoked a release of NO, detected with an NO-sensitive electrode, that was abolished by NO synthesis inhibition, or endothelium removal, and reduced by ~50 % by the A1 antagonist DPCPX, the remainder being attenuated by the A2A antagonist ZM241385. Diclofenac reduced adenosine-evoked NO release by ~50 % under control conditions, abolished that evoked in the presence of ZM241385, but did not affect that evoked in the presence of DPCPX. Adenosine-evoked NO release was also abolished by the adenyl cyclase inhibitor 2â,5â-dideoxyadenosine, while dose-dependent NO release was evoked by iloprost. Finally, stimulation of A1, but not A2A, receptors caused a release of PGI2 from rat aorta, assessed by radioimmunoassay of its stable metabolite, 6-keto PGF1A[%%%], that was abolished by diclofenac. These results suggest that during systemic hypoxia, adenosine acts on endothelial A1 receptors to increase PG synthesis, thereby generating cAMP, which increases the synthesis and release of NO and causes muscle vasodilatation. This pathway may be important in other situations involving these autocoids.




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