Abstract

The present work assesses the effects of the acute administration of adenosine on tachykinergic bronchoconstriction induced in different ways (exogenously administered capsaicin or substance P and vagal electrical stimulation) in anaesthetized and curarized guinea-pigs. Adenosine (30-3000 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) enhanced significantly and dose-relatedly the airway narrowing induced by a single dose of capsaicin (0.5-2 micrograms kg-1, i.v.), both in normal and in vagotomized animals. A smaller and less dose-dependent enhancement by the nucleoside of the pulmonary resistance increase induced by substance P (5-15 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) was observed. This effect was almost completely prevented by the H1 antagonist diphenhydramine (1 mg kg-1, i.v.), which also unmasked an inhibitory action of adenosine at the highest doses. Diphenhydramine, on the contrary, did not significantly modify the potentiation by adenosine of capsaicin-mediated bronchoconstriction. Finally, the nucleoside dose-dependently inhibited the atropine-resistant bronchospasm following vagal electrical stimulation. The use of the selective adenosinic agonists R-N6-[2-phenylisopropyl]adenosine (1-100 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) and 5'-N-methylcarboxamidoadenosine (1-100 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) before the administration of capsaicin, revealed the ability of the first to reproduce the enhancement induced by adenosine, while the second had an inhibitory effect. It is concluded that adenosine has both excitatory and inhibitory modulatory effects on airway responsiveness to excitatory non-adrenergic non-cholinergic (e-NANC) stimuli. The excitatory effects, revealed with substance P and capsaicin, support the hypothesis that adenosine may play a role as an asthma mediator.

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