Ectonucleotidase in sympathetic nerve endings modulates ATP and norepinephrine exocytosis in myocardial ischemia

C Sesti, M Koyama, MJ Broekman, AJ Marcus… - Journal of Pharmacology …, 2003 - ASPET
C Sesti, M Koyama, MJ Broekman, AJ Marcus, R Levi
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 2003ASPET
We recently reported that ATP, coreleased with norepinephrine (NE) from cardiac
sympathetic nerves, increases NE exocytosis via a positive feedback mechanism. A
neuronal ectonucleotidase (E-NTPDase) metabolizes the released ATP, decreasing NE
exocytosis. Excessive NE release in myocardial ischemia exacerbates cardiac dysfunction.
Thus, we studied whether the ATP-mediated autocrine amplification of NE release is
operative in ischemia and, if so, whether it can be modulated by E-NTPDase and its …
We recently reported that ATP, coreleased with norepinephrine (NE) from cardiac sympathetic nerves, increases NE exocytosis via a positive feedback mechanism. A neuronal ectonucleotidase (E-NTPDase) metabolizes the released ATP, decreasing NE exocytosis. Excessive NE release in myocardial ischemia exacerbates cardiac dysfunction. Thus, we studied whether the ATP-mediated autocrine amplification of NE release is operative in ischemia and, if so, whether it can be modulated by E-NTPDase and its recombinant equivalent, solCD39. Isolated, guinea pig hearts underwent 10- or 20-min ischemic episodes, wherein NE was released by exocytosis and reversal of the NE transporter, respectively. Furthermore, to restrict the role of E-NTPDase to transmitter ATP, sympathetic nerve endings were isolated (cardiac synaptosomes) and subjected to increasing periods of ischemia. Availability of released ATP at the nerve terminals was either increased via E-NTPDase inhibition or diminished by enhancing ATP hydrolysis with solCD39. P2X receptor blockade with PPADS was used to attenuate the effects of released ATP. We found that, in short-term ischemia (but, as anticipated, not in protracted ischemia, where NE release is carrier-mediated), ATP exocytosis was linearly correlated with that of NE. This indicates that by limiting the availability of ATP at sympathetic terminals, E-NTPDase effectively attenuates NE exocytosis in myocardial ischemia. Our findings suggest a key role for neuronal E-NTPDase in the control of adrenergic function in the ischemic heart. Because excessive NE release is an established cause of dysfunction in ischemic heart disease, solCD39 may offer a novel therapeutic approach to myocardial ischemia and its consequences.
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