Abstract
For over four decades the thoracic aortic ring model has become one of the most widely used methods to study vascular reactivity and electromechanical coupling. A question that is rarely asked, however, is what function does a drug-mediated relaxation (or contraction) in this model serve in the intact system? The physiological significance of adenosine relaxation in rings isolated from large elastic conduit arteries from a wide range of species remains largely unknown. We propose that adenosine relaxation increases aortic compliance in acute stress states and facilitates ventricular-arterial (VA) coupling, and thereby links compliance and coronary artery perfusion to myocardial energy metabolism. In 1963 Berne argued that adenosine acts as a local negative feedback regulator between oxygen supply and demand in the heart during hypoxic/ischemic stress. The adenosine VA coupling hypothesis extends and enhances Berne's “adenosine hypothesis” from a local regulatory scheme in the heart to include conduit arterial function. In multicellular organisms, evolution may have selected adenosine, nitric oxide, and other vascular mediators, to modulate VA coupling for optimal transfer of oxygen (and nutrients) from the lung, heart, large conduit arteries, arterioles and capillaries to respiring mitochondria. Finally, a discussion of the potential clinical significance of adenosine modulation of VA coupling is extended to vascular aging and disease, including hypertension, diabetes, obesity, coronary artery disease and heart failure.
Highlights
Berne’s “labile substance” was adenosine, and the same “adenine compound” was shown to influence heart function some 30 years earlier by Drury and Szent-Gyorgyi (1929)
We know adenosine as a naturally occurring, multi-functional, endogenous purine nucleoside that plays a key role in the cardiovascular system by activating adenosine receptor subtypes on constituent
The focus of this perspective is on a new role for adenosine as a possible “aortic compliance regulator” that links myocardial perfusion to arterial compliance in the cardiovascular system
Summary
Berne’s “labile substance” was adenosine, and the same “adenine compound” was shown to influence heart function some 30 years earlier by Drury and Szent-Gyorgyi (1929). The aorta is not a resistance vessel constantly dilating and relaxing, like the smaller muscular coronary arteries or peripheral arterioles, to meet the oxygen demands of a tissue.
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