Abstract

Human adipocytes are of limited viability (7 +/- 2% release of lactate dehydrogenase/h) and contain active ectophosphatases which are capable of sequentially degrading ATP to adenosine. At densities of 30,000-40,000 cells/ml, human fat cell suspensions accumulated adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine, and their concentrations were 38 +/- 8, 120 +/- 10, and 31 +/- 7 nmol/liter after 3 h of incubation. Dipyridamole (10 mumol/liter), an inhibitor of nucleoside transport, caused a 5-7-fold increase in adenosine accumulation which was reduced by 85% on inhibition of ectophosphatases by beta-glycerophosphate and antibodies against ecto-5'-nucleotidase or alpha, beta-methylene 5'-adenosine diphosphate (10 mumol/liter), respectively, indicating that most of the adenosine is produced in the extracellular compartment. Accordingly, the spontaneous accumulation of adenosine was reduced beyond 5 nmol/liter on inhibition of ectophosphatase activities or removal of extracellular AMP by AMP deaminase (4 units/ml). Added adenosine (30 nmol/liter) disappeared until its concentration approached 5 nmol/liter. Isoproterenol (1 mumol/liter) had no effect on adenosine accumulation regardless whether purine production from extracellular sources was minimized or not. In contrast to adenosine, the concentrations of inosine and hypoxanthine displayed only a modest decrease (30-50%) on inhibition of ectophosphatase activities. In addition, isoproterenol caused a 2-3-fold increase in inosine and hypoxanthine production which was concentration-dependent and could be inhibited by propranolol. It is concluded that the adenosine that accumulates in human adipocyte suspensions is almost exclusively derived from adenine nucleotides which are released by leaking cells. By contrast, inosine and hypoxanthine are produced inside the cells, and the release of these latter purines appears to be linked to ATP turnover via adenylate cyclase.

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