1. Academic Validation
  2. L-[3H]adenosine, a new metabolically stable enantiomeric probe for adenosine transport systems in rat brain synaptoneurosomes

L-[3H]adenosine, a new metabolically stable enantiomeric probe for adenosine transport systems in rat brain synaptoneurosomes

  • J Neurochem. 1991 Feb;56(2):548-52. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1991.tb08184.x.
J G Gu 1 S Delaney A N Sawka J D Geiger
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Manitoba Faculty of Medicine, Winnipeg, Canada.
Abstract

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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