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Vol. 294, Issue 1, 126-133, July 2000
Groupe d'Immunologie Denis Diderot, Université Paris 7, Hall
des Biotechnologies, Paris, France
The effect of repeated oral administration of ATP on purine transport
and metabolism was investigated in rats. An increased ability of the
gut to capture intraluminal purine nucleosides and to export ATP and
nucleosides toward portal bloodstream was observed in rats after 30 days of treatment with 5 mg/kg/day ATP. This was accompanied in
erythrocytes by an increased transport of adenosine rapidly transformed
into ATP, which in turn was exported toward extracellular fluid.
However, these metabolic changes were associated with a paradoxical and
progressive diminution of plasma ATP level below that found in control
rats and that was not strictly dependent on the ATP dose administered,
whereas plasma adenosine concentration remained unchanged. This
diminution likely resulted from an increased ectonucleotidase activity,
suggesting that the chronic administration of ATP seems to induce a
progressive adaptation of purine metabolism. This adaptive response to
free purine supplementation affects both intracellular metabolism and
purine exchange between intracellular and extracellular compartments.
This modification of free purine turnover and delivery may affect
physiological parameters under the control of P1 and
P2 purinoceptors described in different experimental models.
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