Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle

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Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle. / Nyberg, Michael Permin; Mortensen, Stefan Peter; Thaning, Pia; Saltin, Bengt; Hellsten, Ylva.

I: Hypertension, Bind 56, Nr. 6, 2010, s. 1102-1108.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nyberg, MP, Mortensen, SP, Thaning, P, Saltin, B & Hellsten, Y 2010, 'Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle', Hypertension, bind 56, nr. 6, s. 1102-1108. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521

APA

Nyberg, M. P., Mortensen, S. P., Thaning, P., Saltin, B., & Hellsten, Y. (2010). Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle. Hypertension, 56(6), 1102-1108. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521

Vancouver

Nyberg MP, Mortensen SP, Thaning P, Saltin B, Hellsten Y. Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle. Hypertension. 2010;56(6):1102-1108. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521

Author

Nyberg, Michael Permin ; Mortensen, Stefan Peter ; Thaning, Pia ; Saltin, Bengt ; Hellsten, Ylva. / Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle. I: Hypertension. 2010 ; Bind 56, Nr. 6. s. 1102-1108.

Bibtex

@article{4b960ab0f23f11dfb6d2000ea68e967b,
title = "Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle",
abstract = "One major unresolved issue in muscle blood flow regulation is that of the role of circulating versus interstitial vasodilatory compounds. The present study determined adenosine-induced formation of NO and prostacyclin in the human muscle interstitium versus in femoral venous plasma to elucidate the interaction and importance of these vasodilators in the 2 compartments. To this end, we performed experiments on humans using microdialysis technique in skeletal muscle tissue, as well as the femoral vein, combined with experiments on cultures of microvascular endothelial versus skeletal muscle cells. In young healthy humans, microdialysate was collected at rest, during arterial infusion of adenosine, and during interstitial infusion of adenosine through microdialysis probes inserted into musculus vastus lateralis. Muscle interstitial NO and prostacyclin increased with arterial and interstitial infusion of adenosine. The addition of adenosine to skeletal muscle cells increased NO formation (fluorochrome 4-amino-5-methylamino-2',7-difluorescein fluorescence), whereas prostacyclin levels remained unchanged. The addition of adenosine to microvascular endothelial cells induced an increase in NO and prostacyclin levels. These findings provide novel insight into the role of adenosine in skeletal muscle blood flow regulation and vascular function by revealing that both interstitial and plasma adenosine have a stimulatory effect on NO and prostacyclin formation. In addition, both skeletal muscle and microvascular endothelial cells are potential mediators of adenosine-induced formation of NO in vivo, whereas only endothelial cells appear to play a role in adenosine-induced formation of prostacyclin.",
author = "Nyberg, {Michael Permin} and Mortensen, {Stefan Peter} and Pia Thaning and Bengt Saltin and Ylva Hellsten",
note = "CURIS 2010 5200 136",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521",
language = "English",
volume = "56",
pages = "1102--1108",
journal = "Hypertension",
issn = "0194-911X",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams & Wilkins",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interstitial and plasma adenosine stimulate nitric oxide and prostacyclin formation in human skeletal muscle

AU - Nyberg, Michael Permin

AU - Mortensen, Stefan Peter

AU - Thaning, Pia

AU - Saltin, Bengt

AU - Hellsten, Ylva

N1 - CURIS 2010 5200 136

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - One major unresolved issue in muscle blood flow regulation is that of the role of circulating versus interstitial vasodilatory compounds. The present study determined adenosine-induced formation of NO and prostacyclin in the human muscle interstitium versus in femoral venous plasma to elucidate the interaction and importance of these vasodilators in the 2 compartments. To this end, we performed experiments on humans using microdialysis technique in skeletal muscle tissue, as well as the femoral vein, combined with experiments on cultures of microvascular endothelial versus skeletal muscle cells. In young healthy humans, microdialysate was collected at rest, during arterial infusion of adenosine, and during interstitial infusion of adenosine through microdialysis probes inserted into musculus vastus lateralis. Muscle interstitial NO and prostacyclin increased with arterial and interstitial infusion of adenosine. The addition of adenosine to skeletal muscle cells increased NO formation (fluorochrome 4-amino-5-methylamino-2',7-difluorescein fluorescence), whereas prostacyclin levels remained unchanged. The addition of adenosine to microvascular endothelial cells induced an increase in NO and prostacyclin levels. These findings provide novel insight into the role of adenosine in skeletal muscle blood flow regulation and vascular function by revealing that both interstitial and plasma adenosine have a stimulatory effect on NO and prostacyclin formation. In addition, both skeletal muscle and microvascular endothelial cells are potential mediators of adenosine-induced formation of NO in vivo, whereas only endothelial cells appear to play a role in adenosine-induced formation of prostacyclin.

AB - One major unresolved issue in muscle blood flow regulation is that of the role of circulating versus interstitial vasodilatory compounds. The present study determined adenosine-induced formation of NO and prostacyclin in the human muscle interstitium versus in femoral venous plasma to elucidate the interaction and importance of these vasodilators in the 2 compartments. To this end, we performed experiments on humans using microdialysis technique in skeletal muscle tissue, as well as the femoral vein, combined with experiments on cultures of microvascular endothelial versus skeletal muscle cells. In young healthy humans, microdialysate was collected at rest, during arterial infusion of adenosine, and during interstitial infusion of adenosine through microdialysis probes inserted into musculus vastus lateralis. Muscle interstitial NO and prostacyclin increased with arterial and interstitial infusion of adenosine. The addition of adenosine to skeletal muscle cells increased NO formation (fluorochrome 4-amino-5-methylamino-2',7-difluorescein fluorescence), whereas prostacyclin levels remained unchanged. The addition of adenosine to microvascular endothelial cells induced an increase in NO and prostacyclin levels. These findings provide novel insight into the role of adenosine in skeletal muscle blood flow regulation and vascular function by revealing that both interstitial and plasma adenosine have a stimulatory effect on NO and prostacyclin formation. In addition, both skeletal muscle and microvascular endothelial cells are potential mediators of adenosine-induced formation of NO in vivo, whereas only endothelial cells appear to play a role in adenosine-induced formation of prostacyclin.

U2 - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521

DO - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.161521

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21041702

VL - 56

SP - 1102

EP - 1108

JO - Hypertension

JF - Hypertension

SN - 0194-911X

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 23207367