Abstract
The endogenous purine 8-aminoguanine induces diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria by inhibiting PNPase (purine nucleoside phosphorylase); however, mechanistic details are unknown. Here, we further explored in rats 8-aminoguanine's effects on renal excretory function by combining studies using intravenous 8-aminoguanine, intrarenal artery infusions of PNPase substrates (inosine and guanosine), renal microdialysis, mass spectrometry, selective adenosine receptor ligands, adenosine receptor knockout rats, laser doppler blood flow analysis, cultured renal microvascular smooth muscle cells, HEK293 cells expressing A2B receptors and homogeneous time resolved fluorescence assay for adenylyl cyclase activity. Intravenous 8-aminoguanine caused diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria and increased renal microdialysate levels of inosine and guanosine. Intrarenal inosine, but not guanosine, exerted diuretic/natriuretic/glucosuric effects. In 8-aminoguanine-pretreated rats, intrarenal inosine did not induce additional diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria. 8-Aminoguanine did not induce diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria in A2B-receptor knockout rats, yet did so in A1- and A2A-receptor knockout rats. Inosine's effects on renal excretory function were abolished in A2B knockout rats. Intrarenal BAY 60-6583 (A2B agonist) induced diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria and increased medullary blood flow. 8-Aminoguanine increased medullary blood flow, a response blocked by pharmacological inhibition of A2B, but not A2A, receptors. In HEK293 cells expressing A2B receptors, inosine activated adenylyl cyclase, and this was abolished by MRS 1754 (A2B antagonist). In renal microvascular smooth muscle cells, 8-aminoguanine and forodesine (PNPase inhibitor) increased inosine and 3',5'-cAMP; however, in cells from A2B knockout rats, 8-aminoguanine and forodesine did not augment 3',5'-cAMP yet increased inosine. 8-Aminoguanine induces diuresis/natriuresis/glucosuria by increasing renal interstitial levels of inosine which, via A2B receptor activation, increases renal excretory function, perhaps in part by increasing medullary blood flow.
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