Abstract

We previously demonstrated that A2A, but not A2B, adenosine receptors (ARs) mediate coronary reactive hyperemia (RH), possibly by producing H2O2 and, subsequently, opening ATP-dependent K(+) (KATP) channels in coronary smooth muscle cells. In this study, A1 AR knockout (KO), A3 AR KO, and A1 and A3 AR double-KO (A1/A3 DKO) mice were used to investigate the roles and mechanisms of A1 and A3 ARs in modulation of coronary RH. Coronary flow of isolated hearts was measured using the Langendorff system. A1 KO and A1/A3 DKO, but not A3 KO, mice showed a higher flow debt repayment [~30% more than wild-type (WT) mice, P < 0.05] following a 15-s occlusion. SCH-58261 (a selective A2A AR antagonist, 1 μM) eliminated the augmented RH, suggesting the involvement of enhanced A2A AR-mediated signaling in A1 KO mice. In isolated coronary arteries, immunohistochemistry showed an upregulation of A2A AR (1.6 ± 0.2 times that of WT mice, P < 0.05) and a higher magnitude of adenosine-induced H2O2 production in A1 KO mice (1.8 ± 0.3 times that of WT mice, P < 0.05), which was blocked by SCH-58261. Catalase (2,500 U/ml) and glibenclamide (a KATP channel blocker, 5 μM), but not N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, also abolished the enhanced RH in A1 KO mice. Our data suggest that A1, but not A3, AR counteracts the A2A AR-mediated CF increase and that deletion of A1 AR results in upregulation of A2A AR and/or removal of the negative modulatory effect of A1 AR, thus leading to an enhanced A2A AR-mediated H2O2 production, KATP channel opening, and coronary vasodilation during RH. This is the first report implying that A1 AR has a role in coronary RH.

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