Abstract

Adenosine relaxes the coronary arteries of various species through A2 receptors. The aim of the present investigation was to evaluate the relaxing effects of adenosine in relation to the role of calcium in bovine coronary arteries by studying the vasodilatory effect of adenosine in normal and calcium-free medium and on calcium-45 efflux into calcium-free medium. Acetylcholine (ACh) and norepinephrine (NE) were used to induce tone in coronary artery rings. Adenosine, 5'-(N-ethylcarboxamido)adenosine (NECA), and N6-(L-phenylisopropyl)adenosine (L-PIA) produced concentration-dependent relaxations of the coronary artery rings. Both in normal and calcium-free medium, the order of potency for adenosine analogs (NECA greater than L-PIA greater than adenosine) was similar and 8-phenyltheophylline antagonized the relaxation responses to adenosine and its analogs. Removal of extracellular calcium shifted the concentration-response curves to the right in a parallel fashion, slowed the rate of relaxation, and in NE contracted rings reduced the maximum responses for adenosine and its analogs. In calcium-free medium, adenosine was without an effect on calcium-45 efflux in the presence of ACh. However, adenosine inhibited the stimulated calcium-45 efflux induced by NE. The data suggest that the vasodilatory action of adenosine in bovine coronary smooth muscle has both extracellular calcium-dependent and -independent components.

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