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Cardiovascular Adenosine Receptors: Expression, Actions And Interactions, John Headrick, Kevin Ashton, Roselyn Rose'meyer, Jason Peart
Cardiovascular Adenosine Receptors: Expression, Actions And Interactions, John Headrick, Kevin Ashton, Roselyn Rose'meyer, Jason Peart
Kevin Ashton
Intra- and extracellular adenosine levels rise in response to physiological stimuli and with metabolic/energetic perturbations, inflammatory challenge and tissue injury. Extracellular adenosine engages members of the G-protein coupled adenosine receptor (AR) family to mediate generally beneficial acute and adaptive responses within all constituent cells of the heart. In this way the four AR sub-types—A1, A2A, A2B, and A3Rs—regulate myocardial contraction, heart rate and conduction, adrenergic control, coronary vascular tone, cardiac and vascular growth, inflammatory–vascular cell interactions, and cellular stress-resistance, injury and death. The AR sub-types exert both distinct and overlapping effects, and may interact in mediating these cardiovascular responses. The …