Extracellular adenosine is a danger/injury signal that initiates protective physiology, such as hypothermia. Adenosine has been shown to trigger hypothermia via agonism at A and A adenosine receptors (AAR, AAR). Here, we find that adenosine continues to elicit hypothermia in mice null for AAR and AAR and investigated the effect of agonism at AAR or AAR. The poorly brain penetrant AAR agonists CGS-21680 and PSB-0777 caused hypothermia, which was not seen in mice lacking AAR. MRS7352, a likely non-brain penetrant AAR antagonist, inhibited PSB-0777 hypothermia. While vasodilation is probably a contributory mechanism, AAR agonism also caused hypometabolism, indicating that vasodilation is not the sole mechanism. The AAR agonist BAY60-6583 elicited hypothermia, which was lost in mice null for AAR. Low intracerebroventricular doses of BAY60-6583 also caused hypothermia, indicating a brain site of action, with neuronal activation in the preoptic area and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. Thus, agonism at any one of the canonical adenosine receptors, AAR, AAR, AAR, or AAR, can cause hypothermia. This four-fold redundancy in adenosine-mediated initiation of hypothermia may reflect the centrality of hypothermia as a protective response.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6067974 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2018.02.035 | DOI Listing |
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