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Regional heterogeneities in the production of uric acid from adenosine in the bivascularly perfused rat liver
Authors:Fernandes  Talma R.L.  Suzuki-Kemmelmeier  Fumie  Constantin  Jorgete  Bracht  Adelar
Affiliation:(1) Laboratory of Liver Metabolism, University of Maring´, 87020900 Maringá, Brazil
Abstract:The heterogeneity of the liver parenchyma in relation to uric acid production from adenosine was investigated using the bivascularly perfused rat liver in the anterograde and retrograde modes. Adenosine was infused in livers from fed rats during 20 min at four different concentrations (20, 50, 100 and 200 mgrM) according to four experimental protocols as follows: (A) anterograde perfusion, with adenosine infusion into the portal vein; (B) anterograde perfusion, with adenosine in the hepatic artery, (C) retrograde perfusion, with adenosine in the hepatic vein; (D) retrograde perfusion, with adenosine in the hepatic artery. With protocols A, B, and D uric acid production from adenosine was always characterized by initial bursts followed by progressive decreases toward smaller steady-states. With protocol C the initial burst was present only when 200 mgrM adenosine was infused. The initial bursts in uric acid production were accompanied by simultaneous increases in the ratio of uric acid production/adenosine uptake rate. These initial bursts are thus representing increments in the production of uric acid that are not corresponded by similar increments in the metabolic uptake rates of adenosine. Global analysis of uric acid production revealed that the final steady-state rates were approximately equal for all infusion rates with protocols A, B and C, but smaller with protocol D. This difference, however, can be explained in terms of the differences in accessible cellular spaces, which are much smaller when protocol D is employed. When the analysis was performed in terms of the extra amounts of uric acid produced during the infusion of adenosine, where the initial bursts are also taken into account, different dose-response curves were found for each experimental protocol. These differences cannot be explained in terms of the accessible cell spaces and they are likely to reflect regional heterogeneities. From the various dose-response curves and from the known characteristics of the microcirculation of the rat liver it can be concluded that the initial bursts in uric acid production are generated in periportal hepatocytes. The reason for this heterogeneity could be related to the metabolic effects of adenosine, especially to oxygen uptake inhibition, which is likely to produce changes in the ATP/AMP ratios.
Keywords:bivascular liver perfusion  adenosine  uric acid  zonation
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