Adenosine Receptor
Based on the competitive antagonism of adenosine activity by methylxanthines, the existence of adenosine receptors was postulated more than 40 years ago; 20 years later, four receptors were cloned from several mammalian species, including humans1, and identified as members of a large G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family.Adenosine is the only important agonist for the three key adenosine receptors — A1, A2A and A2B — and the major, full agonist ligand for the A3 receptor (for which inosine is an incomplete agonist). The concentration of adenosine in the extracellular compartment is the consequence of many biological processes, including extracellular adenosine production, adenosine transport, adenosine formation from intracellular adenosine sources (for example, via the S-adenosylhomocysteine pathway) and adenosine metabolism to inosine or AMP.
Adenosine receptors have been implicated in several key physiological processes, ranging from neuromodulation to immune regulation, and from vascular function to metabolic control. Adenosine has been postulated to have a role as a danger signal involved in homeostasis. Adenosine signalling is not very prominent under physiological conditions in most tissues, but aberrant adenosine signalling has been implicated as a common disease mechanism underlying inflammatory and ischaemic tissue damage.These receptors are widely expressed and have been implicated in several biological functions, both physiological and pathological. These include cardiac rhythm and circulation, lipolysis, renal blood flow, immune function, sleep regulation and angiogenesis, as well as inflammatory diseases, ischaemia-reperfusion and neurodegenerative disorder.
References:
1.Chen JF, et al. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2013 Apr;12(4):265-86.
Adenosine receptors have been implicated in several key physiological processes, ranging from neuromodulation to immune regulation, and from vascular function to metabolic control. Adenosine has been postulated to have a role as a danger signal involved in homeostasis. Adenosine signalling is not very prominent under physiological conditions in most tissues, but aberrant adenosine signalling has been implicated as a common disease mechanism underlying inflammatory and ischaemic tissue damage.These receptors are widely expressed and have been implicated in several biological functions, both physiological and pathological. These include cardiac rhythm and circulation, lipolysis, renal blood flow, immune function, sleep regulation and angiogenesis, as well as inflammatory diseases, ischaemia-reperfusion and neurodegenerative disorder.
References:
1.Chen JF, et al. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2013 Apr;12(4):265-86.
Apoptosis
Adenosine Receptor
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Binodenoson
catalog no : M28731
cas no: 144348-08-3
Binodenoson is a potent and selective A2A adenosine receptor agonist (KD=270 nM). Binodenoson is being developed as a short-acting coronary vasodilator as an adjunct to radiotracers for use in myocardial stress imaging. -
MIPS521
catalog no : M28608
cas no: 1146188-19-3
MIPS-521 is a positive allosteric modulator of the A1R. -
A2B receptor antagonist 2
catalog no : M28147
cas no: 784-90-7
A2B receptor antagonist 2 is an antagonist of adenosine receptor A2B (Ki = 2.30 μM for rA1, 6.8 μM for rA2A, 3.44 μM for hA2B). -
A2A receptor antagonist 1
catalog no : M28146
cas no: 443103-97-7
A2A receptor antagonist 1 is an antagonist of both adenosine A2A receptor and A1 receptor with Kis of 4 and 264 nM, respectively. -
VPC171
catalog no : M27936
cas no: 1018830-99-3
VPC171 is a novel adenosine A1 receptor positive allosteric modulator (PAM).