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Protection from pulmonary ischemia-reperfusion injury by adenosine A2A receptor activation

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TLDR
Specific activation of A2AARs provides potent protection against lung IR injury via attenuation of inflammation, and occurs in the absence of circulating blood thereby indicating a protective role of A 2AAR activation on resident lung cells such as alveolar macrophages.
Abstract
Background: Lung ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury leads to significant morbidity and mortality which remains a major obstacle after lung transplantation. However, the role of various subset(s) of lung cell populations in the pathogenesis of lung IR injury and the mechanisms of cellular protection remain to be elucidated. In the present study, we investigated the effects of adenosine A 2A receptor (A 2A AR) activation on resident lung cells after IR injury using an isolated, bufferperfused murine lung model. Methods: To assess the protective effects of A2AAR activation, three groups of C57BL/6J mice were studied: a sham group (perfused for 2 hr with no ischemia), an IR group (1 hr ischemia + 1 hr reperfusion) and an IR+ATL313 group where ATL313, a specific A 2A AR agonist, was included in the reperfusion buffer after ischemia. Lung injury parameters and pulmonary function studies were also performed after IR injury in A2AAR knockout mice, with or without ATL313 pretreatment. Lung function was assessed using a buffer-perfused isolated lung system. Lung injury was measured by assessing lung edema, vascular permeability, cytokine/chemokine activation and myeloperoxidase levels in the bronchoalveolar fluid. Results: After IR, lungs from C57BL/6J wild-type mice displayed significant dysfunction (increased airway resistance, pulmonary artery pressure and decreased pulmonary compliance) and significant injury (increased vascular permeability and edema). Lung injury and dysfunction after IR were significantly attenuated by ATL313 treatment. Significant induction of TNF-α, KC (CXCL1), MIP-2 (CXCL2) and RANTES (CCL5) occurred after IR which was also attenuated by ATL313 treatment. Lungs from A2AAR knockout mice also displayed significant dysfunction, injury and cytokine/ chemokine production after IR, but ATL313 had no effect in these mice. Conclusion: Specific activation of A 2A ARs provides potent protection against lung IR injury via attenuation of inflammation. This protection occurs in the absence of circulating blood thereby indicating a protective role of A2AAR activation on resident lung cells such as alveolar macrophages. Specific A 2A AR activation may be a promising therapeutic target for the prevention or treatment of pulmonary graft dysfunction in transplant patients.

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Anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects of the A2A adenosine receptor.

TL;DR: The current evidence for the anti-inflammatory effects of the A2AAR in different cell types is reviewed and possible molecular mechanisms mediating these effects are discussed, including the potential for generalised suppression of inflammatory gene expression through inhibition of the NF-κB and JAK/STAT proinflammatory signalling pathways.
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Pannexin-1 channels on endothelial cells mediate vascular inflammation during lung ischemia-reperfusion injury.

TL;DR: This study is the first, to the authors' knowledge, to demonstrate that endothelial Panx1 plays a key role in mediating vascular permeability, inflammation, edema, leukocyte infiltration, and lung dysfunction after I/R.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design, synthesis, and evaluation of novel A2A adenosine receptor agonists.

TL;DR: In this paper, comparative molecular field analysis (CoMFA) was used to predict the A2A selectivity and predictability for rat brain receptors with differences in their structural and electrostatic properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

A2A Adenosine Receptors on Bone Marrow-Derived Cells Protect Liver from Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

TL;DR: The data suggest that activation of the A2AR on bone marrow-derived cells is primarily responsible for protecting the liver from reperfusion injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytolytic Therapy for the Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome Complicating Lung Transplantation

TL;DR: The fall off in FEV1 that characterizes the BOS may be altered usefully by augmented immunotherapy, which can be rapid and sustained although it is neither completely arrested nor ever reversed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reduced neutrophil infiltration protects against lung reperfusion injury after transplantation.

TL;DR: Leukocyte depletion of the blood reperfusate protects against microvascular permeability and significantly improves pulmonary graft function, and this lung ischemia reperfusion injury may be reversed through the interruption of the inflammatory cascade and the interference with neutrophil infiltration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective adenosine-A2A activation reduces lung reperfusion injury following transplantation

TL;DR: DWH-146e reduced lung neutrophil sequestration and dramatically improved pulmonary graft function and Selective adenosine-A2A activation interrupts the neutrophIL-mediated inflammatory response and reduces lung reperfusion injury following transplantation.
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