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Publication : Deletion of the adenosine A1 receptor gene does not alter neuronal damage following ischaemia in vivo or in vitro.

First Author  Olsson T Year  2004
Journal  Eur J Neurosci Volume  20
Issue  5 Pages  1197-204
PubMed ID  15341591 Mgi Jnum  J:101298
Mgi Id  MGI:3603721 Doi  10.1111/j.1460-9568.2004.03564.x
Citation  Olsson T, et al. (2004) Deletion of the adenosine A1 receptor gene does not alter neuronal damage following ischaemia in vivo or in vitro. Eur J Neurosci 20(5):1197-204
abstractText  Extracellular adenosine is dramatically increased during cerebral ischaemia and is considered to be neuroprotective due to its inhibitory effect on synaptic transmission mediated by the adenosine A1 receptor (A1R). We investigated the importance of the A1R in a mouse model of global ischaemia and in a murine hippocampal slice culture model of in vitro ischaemia, using mice with the A1R gene deleted. In brains from mice lacking the A1R, damage induced by global ischaemia was similar to that in wild-type animals. In contrast, treatment with a selective A1R antagonist [8-cyclo-pentyl theophylline (8-CPT)], administered before the ischaemic insult in naive wild-type mice, exacerbated the neuronal damage following global ischaemia. Although the inhibitory action of adenosine on excitatory neurotransmission in hippocampal slices was lost in A1R knockout mice, there was no difference in damage between slices from wild-type and knockout mice after in vitro ischaemia. The results suggest that some effects of the A1R are compensated for in knockout animals.
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