Abstract

Adenosine is a neuromodulator which acts through adenosine receptors regulating functions such as inhibition of glutamate release. Adenosine A 1 and A 2A receptor activations most often regulate opposing actions. Primary rat cortical neurons and rat C6 cells, an astrocytic derived cell line, were exposed to 100 μM l-glutamate, and cell viability and transduction pathways mediated by both A 1 and A 2A receptors were analyzed. Glutamate-induced excitotoxic damage was found only in cortical neurons, with C6 cells preserved. In C6 cells, adenosine A 1 and A 2A receptors were increased and decreased, respectively. Consequently, A 1-mediated adenylyl cyclase inhibition and A 2A-mediated adenylyl cyclase stimulation were, respectively, increased and decreased after glutamate exposure. In cortical neurons, glutamate treatment increased both A 1 and A 2A receptors. Moreover, adenylyl cyclase responsiveness to A 1 or A 2A receptor agonists was heightened in these cells, in which pharmacological activation of AC induced cell death. Finally, activation of A 1 receptor or blockade of A 2A receptor during glutamate treatment partially prevented the glutamate-induced cell death detected in cultured cortical neurons. Results show that adenosine receptors are regulated by glutamate, and that this regulation is dependent on the cell type, suggesting that adenosine receptors might be promising targets in the therapy against excitotoxic cell death.

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