Effects of Deoxycoformycin on Adenosine, Inosine, Hypoxanthine, Xanthine, and Uric Acid Release from the Hypoxemic Rat Cerebral Cortex

Abstract
The effects of the adenosine deaminase inhibitor, deoxycoformycin, on purine release from the rat cerebral cortex were studied with the cortical cup technique. Deoxycoformycin (5 and 500 μg/kg i.v.) enhanced the hypoxia/ischemia-evoked release of adenosine from the cerebral cortex, indicating a marked rise in the adenosine content of interstitial fluid in the cerebral cortex. Inosine and hypoxanthine release were attenuated at the higher dose of deoxycoformycin, acid release into the cortical perfusates was enhanced at the higher dose level. These results demonstrate that low doses of deoxycoformycin can be used to elevate interstitial levels of adenosine in the brain during hypoxia, and to depress the formation of some of its metabolites. The elevation of hypoxia/ischemia-evoked adenosine levels can account for the previously reported potentiation of hypoxia-evoked increases in rat cerebral blood flow after deoxycoformycin administration. The potential therapeutic utility of these findings is discussed.