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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 299-306, April 1998
Medical Countermeasures Section, Defence Research Establishment
Suffield, Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada
Extracellular ATP is a broad-spectrum cytotoxic agent that produces
effects via cell surface P2 purinoceptors. The ligand-gated P2X purinoceptor subtype has very high sequence homology with the
RP-2 gene, which encodes for apoptosis. The P2X RNA found in
rat vas deferens is expressed preferentially by apoptotic thymocytes. P2X purinoceptor-mediated phasic (twitch) motor responses of the isolated rat vas deferens to neurogenic or exogenous ATP were rapidly,
specifically and irreversibly potentiated by bis(2-chloroethyl)sulfide (HD 10-100 µM). Both untreated and HD-potentiated neurogenic
responses were Ca++ dependent, blocked in the absence of
Ca++ plus 0.1 mM EGTA, by the neuronal Ca++
channel blocker
-conotoxin-MVIIC (3 µM), by the P2 purinoceptor antagonist suramin (100 µM) and by tetrodotoxin (100 nM). HD also potentiated the effects of ATP on isolated guinea pig taenia caecum, where the nucleotide acts at G protein-coupled P2Y purinoceptor subtypes to cause relaxation. HD failed to inhibit the metabolism of
ATP by ecto-ATPase in vas deferens or to cause the release of
endogenous ATP. Potentiation of the twitch response to electric field
stimulation by HD was attenuated or eliminated in tissues excised from
rats previously challenged with topically applied HD, suggesting that
HD absorbed into the systemic circulation had already effected maximal
potentiation of ATP responses before in vitro testing. The
physiological consequences of HD-induced potentiation of the
extracellular actions of ATP are discussed in relation to apoptosis and
necrosis.