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Adenosine metabolism in small coronary arteries of...
Journal article

Adenosine metabolism in small coronary arteries of pig.

Abstract

Adenosine preferentially relaxes small coronary arteries over large ones, and small bovine coronary arteries are also known to have a higher density of adenosine receptors. Here we report a possible role of adenosine metabolism in this process. Subcellular fractions, from right coronary artery (lumen diameter of 2-3 mm) of pig designated as large coronary artery and its subsequent branches (lumen diameter of 0.5-1 mm) as small coronary arteries, were prepared and characterized. In comparison to the various large artery subcellular fractions, the corresponding small artery fractions were richer in 5'-nucleotidase but poorer in adenosine deaminase. Thus a cascade of events may promote adenosine relaxation in small coronary arteries: higher activity of 5'-nucleotidase leads to production of more adenosine, larger number of receptors allows greater reactivity to adenosine, and lower adenosine deaminase level promotes prolonged action of adenosine.

Authors

Grover AK; Samson SE; Lee RM

Journal

IUBMB Life, Vol. 27, No. 4, pp. 717–724

Publication Date

January 1, 1992

ISSN

1521-6543

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