Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The present study was undertaken to demonstrate and characterize potentiation of ventricular overdrive suppression by adenosine. To substantiate that adenosine has an enhanced effect on overdrive suppression, it would be necessary to demonstrate that adenosine increases pause duration independent of slowing spontaneous pre-drive rate. In isolated perfused guinea pig hearts with surgically induced complete atrioventricular block, the effect of adenosine (2-20 microM) on pause duration was compared to two alternative means of slowing the pre-drive rate, i.e., hypothermia (28.0 degrees C to 34.0 degrees C) and cesium chloride (0.3-1.0 mM). The slope value of the linear regression line describing the relationship between pre-drive cycle length and pause duration for adenosine (15.8) was significantly greater than control (1.7), hypothermia (1.7), and cesium chloride (5.4). The competitive adenosine antagonist, aminophylline (60 microM), when infused at the initiation of overdrive during adenosine administration, significantly reduced the effect of adenosine on pause duration by 72.9 +/- 4.2% (mean +/- SEM). The reduction in pause duration by aminophylline was specific for adenosine and did not occur under control conditions or during cesium chloride administration. During hypoxia, aminophylline and adenosine deaminase, when infused at the initiation of overdrive, caused 72.3 +/- 5.6 and 63.3 +/- 6.1% reductions in pause duration, respectively. Endogenous adenosine levels rose significantly with hypoxia (1,687 +/- 202 vs. 36 +/- 4 pmol/min per g during normoxia) and increased significantly further during hypoxic overdrive (3,004 +/- 323 pmol/min per g). In isolated guinea pig Purkinje fibers (n = 4), adenosine (20 microM) increased pause duration by 73.6 +/- 9.9% while only minimally affecting the pre-drive cycle length (7.6 +/- 3.8%). These fibers, when stimulated at 1.5 Hz, also displayed an adenosine-induced reduction in action potential duration at 90% repolarization (16 +/- 2 msec). In addition, we demonstrated that adenosine had an enhanced effect on pause duration in the presence of ouabain (1 microM)-induced attenuation of overdrive suppression. Thus, in isolated Purkinje fibers, it is unlikely that the potentiating effect of adenosine on pause duration, which is independent of its chronotropic effect, is mediated via an enhancement of sodium potassium adenosine triphosphatase pump activity. The effect of adenosine is likely to be secondary to a direct action on outward potassium conductance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of adenosine on ventricular overdrive suppression in isolated guinea pig hearts and Purkinje fibers. 404 82

AMP deaminase, 5'-nucleotidase and adenosine deaminase have been estimated in skeletal muscle and myocardial tissue in normal rats and in rats subjected to experimental myocardial infarction or hypothermia. A difference in the enzyme distribution was found between the right and left ventricles in the normal rat. A decrease in the activity of 5'-nucleotidase and an increase in the activity of adenosine deaminase were observed in infarcted myocardial tissue. The activity of all 3 enzymes was found to be depressed in the myocardium in rats subjected to hypothermia. These results are discussed in relation to adenosine production and its beneficial effects.
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PMID:AMP deaminase, 5'-nucleotidase and adenosine deaminase in rat myocardial tissue in myocardial infarction and hypothermia. 628 39

Two novel halogenated pyrrolopyrimidine analogues of adenosine, isolated from marine sources, have been examined for pharmacological and biochemical activities. 4-Amino-5-bromo-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidine, from a sponge of the genus Echinodictyum, had bronchodilator activity at least as potent as theophylline but with a different biochemical profile; unlike theophylline it had no antagonist activity at CNS adenosine receptors and it was quite a potent inhibitor of adenosine uptake and adenosine kinase in brain tissue. 5'-Deoxy-5-iodotubercidin, isolated from the red alga Hypnea valentiae, caused potent muscle relaxation and hypothermia when injected into mice. This compound was a very potent inhibitor of adenosine uptake into rat and guinea-pig brain slices and an extremely potent inhibitor of adenosine kinase from guinea-pig brain and rat brain and liver. Neither of these two pyrrolopyrimidine analogues was a substrate for, or an inhibitor of, adenosine deaminase. Neither compound appeared to have any direct agonist activity on guinea-pig brain adenosine-stimulated adenylate cyclase (A2 adenosine receptors). 5'-Deoxy-5-iodotubercidin is unique in two respects: it appears to be the first naturally-occurring example of a 5'-deoxyribosyl nucleoside and is the first example of a specifically iodinated nucleoside from natural sources. It may be the most potent adenosine kinase inhibitor yet described and, by virtue of its structure, may prove to be the most specific.
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PMID:Halogenated pyrrolopyrimidine analogues of adenosine from marine organisms: pharmacological activities and potent inhibition of adenosine kinase. 632

Administered intracisternally, adenosine (ADO), 2-chloroadenosine (CADO), adenosine-5'-cyclopropylcarboxamide (ACC) and adenosine-5'-ethylcarboxamide (AEC) caused dose-related increases in hot plate reaction times in mice. The rank order of potency was AEC=ACC greater than CADO greater than ADO and ACC exerted demonstrable effects with doses as low as 10 ng/mouse. ADO itself was more potent than AMP, ADP, ATP and several other related compounds of interest. Theophylline, caffeine and 8-phenyltheophylline antagonized the antinocisponsive effect of CADO or ACC. Papaverine (an adenosine uptake blocker) and erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl) adenine (EHNA: an adenosine deaminase inhibitor) potentiated the effect of ADO. EHNA did not potentiate the action of CADO in this procedure. The antinocisponsive effect of CADO was not antagonized by a host of neurally active agents including naloxone, clonidine and RO 20-1724. Time course studies indicated that the antinocisponsive effect of ADO was transient with the peak effect occurring 5 min after injection and disappearing by 60 min, whereas the effect of CADO persisted for at least 90 min. Intracisternally administered CADO also caused a pronounced hypothermia, loss of muscle tone and was active in the mouse writhing test. Taken together, these data demonstrate that purine exert potent in vivo behavioral effects and are consonant with the existence of a central purinergic P1-receptor which is amenable to selective pharmacological manipulation.
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PMID:In vivo behavioral assessment of central nervous system purinergic receptors. 689 75

Adenosine levels increase at seizure foci as part of a postulated endogenous negative feedback mechanism that controls seizure activity through activation of A1 adenosine receptors. Agents that amplify this site- and event-specific surge of adenosine could provide antiseizure activity similar to that of adenosine receptor agonists but with fewer dose-limiting side effects. Inhibitors of adenosine kinase (AK) were examined because AK is normally the primary route of adenosine metabolism. The AK inhibitors 5'-amino-5'-deoxyadenosine, 5-iodotubercidin, and 5'-deoxy-5-iodotubercidin inhibited maximal electroshock (MES) seizures in rats. Several structural classes of novel AK inhibitors were identified and shown to exhibit similar activity, including a prototype inhibitor, 4-(N-phenylamino)-5-phenyl-7-(5'-deoxyribofuranosyl)pyrrolo[2, 3-d]pyrimidine (GP683; MES ED50 = 1.1 mg/kg). AK inhibitors also reduced epileptiform discharges induced by removal of Mg2+ in a rat neocortical preparation. Overall, inhibitors of adenosine deaminase or of adenosine transport were less effective. The antiseizure activities of GP683 in the in vivo and in vitro preparations were reversed by the adenosine receptor antagonists theophylline and 8-(p-sulfophenyl)theophylline. GP683 showed little or no hypotension or bradycardia and minimal hypothermic effect at anticonvulsant doses. This improved side effect profile contrasts markedly with the profound hypotension, bradycardia, and hypothermia and greater inhibition of motor function observed with the adenosine receptor agonist N6-cyclopentyladenosine and opens the way to clinical evaluation of AK inhibitors as a novel, adenosine-based approach to anticonvulsant therapy.
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PMID:Adenosine kinase inhibitors as a novel approach to anticonvulsant therapy. 1033 67

Hypothermic preservation of solid allografts causes profound damage of vascular endothelial cells. This, in turn, might activate innate immunity. In the present study we employed an in vitro model to study to what extent supernatants of damaged endothelial cells are able to activate innate immunity and to study the nature of these signals. The expression of high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) and adhesion molecules on human umbilical vein endothelial cell was studied by immunofluorescence, fluorescence activated cell sorter and Western blotting. Cytokine production was performed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. HMGB1 expression was lost completely in endothelial cells after hypothermic preservation. This was associated with cell damage as it occurred only in untreated endothelial cell but not in cells rendered resistant to hypothermia-mediated damage by dopamine treatment. Only supernatants from hypothermia susceptible cells up-regulated the expression of interleukin (IL)-8 and adhesion molecules in cultured endothelial cells in an HMGB1-dependent manner. In whole blood assays, both supernatants of hypothermia susceptible and resistant cells inhibited tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha production concomitantly with an increased IL-10 secretion. The activity of the supernatants was already found after 6 h of hypothermic preservation, and paralleled the decrease in intracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels. Modulation of TNF-alpha and IL-10 production by these supernatants was abrogated completely by prior treatment with adenosine deaminase and was similar to the response of an A2R agonist. Our study demonstrates that both HMGB1 and adenosine are released during hypothermic preservation. While release of HMGB1 is caused by cell damage, release of adenosine seems to be related to ATP hydrolysis, occurring in both susceptible and resistant cells.
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PMID:High mobility group box 1 and adenosine are both released by endothelial cells during hypothermic preservation. 1834 9