Cardiac adrenoceptors at low temperature: what is the experimental evidence for the adrenoceptor interconversion hypothesis?
- PMID: 199467
Cardiac adrenoceptors at low temperature: what is the experimental evidence for the adrenoceptor interconversion hypothesis?
Abstract
Isolated heart preparations of frog and rat were used to test the validity of the adrenoceptor interconversion hypothesis. This hypothesis claims that low temperature converts the inotropic beta-adrenoceptors in isolated frog and rat heart to alpha-adrenoceptors. The present results do not support the adrenoceptor interconversion hypothesis. In the isolated frog ventricle, lowering the temperature from 24 C to 14 C did not significantly alter the inotropic potency of the sympathomimetic drugs isoprenaline, epinephrine, and phenylephrine and did not reduce the potency of the beta-adrenoceptor blocking drug propranolol as an epinephrine antagonist. In the isolated rat left atrium, lowering the temperature from 31 C to 17-19 C did not significantly change the inotropic potency of isoprenaline, norepinephrine and phenylephrine, did not diminish the potency of propranolol, and did not increase the potency of the alpha-adrenoceptor blocking drug phentolamine.--Benfey, B. G. Cardiac adrenoceptors at low temperature; what is the experimental evidence for the adrenoceptor interconversion hypothesis?