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De Novo Synthesis of Myocardial Adenine Nucleotides in the Rat: Acceleration during recovery from oxygen Deficiency

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TLDR
De novo synthesis of adenine nucleotides increased almost 100% in the heart in situ and in the isolated perfused heart during the first hour of recovery from asphyxia or ischemia, and this acceleration is regarded as an adaptive process contributing to the postanoxic restoration of normal adenines nucleotide levels.
Abstract
De novo synthesis of adenine nucleotides was measured in rat hearts in situ and in isolated perfused rat hearts under normal conditions and during recovery from asphyxia or ischemia. Using l- 14 C-glycine as the precursor substrate, rates of de novo synthesis were determined from the total radioactivity of adenine nucleotides and from the mean specific activity of intracellular glycine. The rate of de novo synthesis of adenine nucleotides was 8.4±1.42 nmoles/g hour -1 in the heart in situ and 1.3±0.12 nmoles/g hour -1 in the isolated perfused heart. De novo synthesis of adenine nucleotides increased almost 100% in the heart in situ and about 580% in the isolated perfused heart during the first hour of recovery from asphyxia or ischemia. This acceleration is regarded as an adaptive process contributing to the postanoxic restoration of normal adenine nucleotide levels. Possible biochemical mechanisms that might be involved in the stimulation of the de novo pathway are a release of feedback inhibition of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate amidotransferase, an enhanced synthesis of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate, and an alternate way of 5-phosphoribosyl-amine formation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The cardiac effects of adenosine

TL;DR: Etude de mecanisme d'action de l'adenosine sur differentes cellules cardiaques and examen de son metabolisme, discussion du role possible of l' adenosine comme mediateur des fonctions cellulaires cardiaque.
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Prolonged depletion of ATP and of the adenine nucleotide pool due to delayed resynthesis of adenine nucleotides following reversible myocardial ischemic injury in dogs

TL;DR: Observations indicate that the marked depression of ATP and adenine nucleotides and the slow recovery of these metabolites occurred in myocardium which nevertheless was reversibly injured in terms of cellular viability.
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Studies of controlled reperfusion after ischemia. XVII. Reperfusion conditions: controlled reperfusion through an internal mammary artery graft--a new technique emphasizing fixed pressure versus fixed flow.

TL;DR: This study tests the usefulness of delivering a controlled reperfusate through an internal mammary graft after acute ischemia by applying a percutaneous technique of mammary artery cannulation and compares reperfusion at fixed pressure versus fixed flow.
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Safety of prolonged aortic clamping with blood cardioplegia. III. Aspartate enrichment of glutamate-blood cardioplegia in energy-depleted hearts after ischemic and reperfusion injury.

TL;DR: Aspartate enrichment of glutamate-blood cardioplegia improves recovery after severe ischemic/reperfusion damage by improving oxidative metabolism during cardooplegic infusion and during postischemic work.
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Decreased Energy Reserve in an Animal Model of Dilated Cardiomyopathy Relationship to Contractile Performance

TL;DR: Observations provide further support for the hypothesis that a decrease in energy reserve via the CK system contributes to reduced cardiac function in the failing heart.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiac nucleotides in hypoxia: possible role in regulation of coronary blood flow.

TL;DR: Experiments were performed on isolated cat hearts perfused with Tyrode's solution and intact hearts of open-chest dogs, finding that cardiac hypoxia resulted in a decrease in coronary vascular resistance and a ...
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Release of Adenosine by the Normal Myocardium in Dogs and Its Relationship to the Regulation of Coronary Resistance

TL;DR: The evidence supporting the hypothesis that adenosine is the mediator of metabolic regulation of coronary blood flow was obtained from experiments characterized by myocardial hypoxia, and the normal pericardial fluid was found to contain adenos...
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Release of adenosine in reactive hyperemia of the dog heart

TL;DR: The dilation of the coronary resistance vessels in response to short periods of myocardial ischemia can be accounted for by the adenosine released from the myocardium.
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Effect of ischemia on adenine nucleotides in cardiac and skeletal muscle.

TL;DR: The appearance of this nucleoside is nevertheless consistent with the hypothesis that under physiological conditions quantities of adenosine, undetectable by present methods, may play a role in the regulation of coronary blood flow.
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