Adenosine transport inhibitors as enhancers of extracellular levels of endogenous adenosine would, presumably, only be effective if, for example, (1) the inhibitors block influx to a greater degree than efflux (release) of intracellular adenosine or (2) the inhibitors block equally well the influx and efflux of adenosine, but significant amounts of adenosine are formed as a result of dephosphorylation of released adenine nucleotides. Limited information is available regarding the directional symmetry of adenosine transporters in neural cells. Using rat brain crude P2 synaptosomal preparations preloaded with l‐[3H]adenosine, our objectives here were to determine (1) if l‐[3H]adenosine, a substrate for adenosine transporters that is more metabolically stable than physiological d‐adenosine, was being released from synaptosomal preparations, (2) the optimal conditions necessary to observe the release, and (3) the degree to which this release was mediated by efflux through bidirectional nucleoside transporters. l‐[3H]Adenosine release was found to be concentration and time dependent, temperature sensitive, and linear with synaptosomal protein. l‐[3H]Adenosine release was inhibited dose‐dependently by dipyridamole, nitrobenzylthioinosine, and dilazep; at concentrations of 100 µM inhibition was at least 40% for dipyridamole, 52% for nitrobenzylthioinosine, and 49% for dilazep. After loading with l‐[3H]adenosine alone or l‐[3H]adenosine plus unlabeled l‐adenosine, d‐adenosine, or uridine, l‐[3H]‐adenosine release was inhibited 42% by l‐adenosine, 69% by uridine, and 81% by d‐adenosine. The inhibition of l‐[3H]adenosine release from the synaptosomal preparations by substrates for or inhibitors of nucleoside transporters suggests that a portion of the release was mediated by nucleoside transporters. This experimental system may prove useful for evaluating the effects of pharmacological agents on bidirectional transport of adenosine.
The kinetic characteristics of [ 3H]adenosine uptake, the extent to which accumulated [3H]adenosine was metabolized, the effects such metabolism had on measurements of apparent Michaelis-Menten kinetic values of KT and Vmnx, and the sensitivities with which nucleoside transport inhibitors blocked [3H]adenosine accumulations were determined in cultured human fetal astrocytes. KT and Vrnax values for accumulations of [3H]labeled purines using 15-s incubations in the absence of the adenosine deaminase inhibitor e,ythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine (EHNA) and the adenosine kinase inhibitor 5'-iodotubercidin (ITU) were 6.2 1iM and 0.15 nmol/ mm/mg of protein for the high-affinity and 2.6 mM and 21 nmol/min/mg of protein for the low-affinity components, respectively. In the presence of EHNA and ITU, where <4% of accumulated [ 3H]adenosinewas metabolized, transport per se was measured, and kinetic values for KT and V~axwere 179 1iM and 5.2 nmol/min/mg of protein, respectively. In the absence of EHNA and ITU, accumulated [ 3H]adenosinewas rapidly metabolized to AMP, ADP, and ATP, and caused an appearance of "concentrative" uptake in that the intracellular levels of [3H]-labeled purines (adenosine plus its metabolites) were 1.4-fold higher than in the medium. No apparent concentrative accumulations of [3H]adenosine were found when assays were conducted using short incubation times in the absence or presence of EHNA and ITU. The nucleoside transport inhibitors dipyridamole (DPR), nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBI), and dilazep biphasically inhibited [3H}adenosine transport; for the inhibitor-sensitive components the IC 50 values were 0.7 nM for NBI, 1.3 nM for DPR, and 3.3 nM for dilazep, and for the inhibitor-resistant component the IC50 values were 2.5 1iM for NBI, 5.1 1j,M for dilazep, and 39.0 1jM for DPR. These findings, in cultured human fetal astrocytes, represent the first demonstration of inhibitor-sensitive and -resistant adenosine transporters in nontransformed human cells.
The relationship between transport and metabolism in synaptoneurosomes was examined to determine the metabolic stability of rapidly accumulated D-[3H]adenosine and L-[3H]adenosine and the degree to which metabolism of the accumulated purines affected measurements of apparent KT and Vmax values for adenosine transport. For D-[3H]adenosine, high- and low-affinity accumulation processes were present. For the high-affinity system an inverse relationship was found between transport reaction times and KT and Vmax values. For incubations of 5, 15, and 600 s, which corresponded to 24, 32, and 76% phosphorylation of accumulated D-[3H]adenosine to nucleotides, apparent KT values were 9.4, 8.4, and 4.5 microM, respectively, and Vmax values were 850, 70, and 12 pmol/min/mg of protein, respectively. Pretreatment with 10 microM erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine, an adenosine deaminase inhibitor, and 5'-iodotubercidin, an adenosine kinase inhibitor, decreased the phosphorylation of accumulated D-[3H]adenosine to 6% with 5-s and 9% with 15-s incubations. This resulted in significantly higher KT values: 36 microM at 5 s and 44 microM at 15 s. At 10-min incubations in the presence of these inhibitors, metabolism of accumulated D-[3H]adenosine was 32%, and apparent KT and Vmax values at this time were not significantly different from those obtained without inhibitors. For L-[3H]adenosine, apparent KT and Vmax values for 20-s incubations were 38.7 microM and 330 pmol/min/mg of protein, respectively. Metabolism (mainly phosphorylation) of accumulated L-[3H]adenosine was observed only at incubations of greater than 30 s.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The stereoenantimers D-[3H]adenosine and L-[3H]adenosine were used to study adenosine accumulation in rat cerebral cortical synaptoneurosomes. L-Adenosine very weakly inhibited rat brain adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity with a Ki value of 385 microM. It did not inhibit rat brain adenosine kinase (AK) activity, nor was it utilized as a substrate for either ADA or AK. The rate constants (fmol/mg of protein/s) for L-[3H]adenosine accumulation measured in assays where transport was stopped either with inhibitor-stop centrifugation or with rapid filtration methods were 82 +/- 14 and 75 +/- 10, respectively. Using the filtration method, the rates of L-[3H]adenosine accumulation were not significantly different from the value of 105 +/- 15 fmol/mg of protein/s measured for D-[3H]adenosine transport. Unlabeled D-adenosine and nitrobenzylthiolnosine, both at a concentration of 100 microM, reduced the levels and rates of L-[3H]adenosine accumulation by greater than 44%. These findings suggest that L-adenosine, a metabolically stable enantiomeric analog, and the naturally occurring D-adenosine are both taken up by rat brain synaptoneurosomes by similar processes, and as such L-adenosine may represent an important new probe with which adenosine uptake may be studied.
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