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AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Vol 261, Issue 4 1057-R1060, Copyright © 1991 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
G. E. Nilsson
Department of Zoophysiology, Uppsala University, Sweden.
By depressing energy consumption, anoxia-tolerant animals are thought to compensate for a reduced ability to produce energy during anoxia. Adenosine is an inhibitory neuromodulator in vertebrates and, hence, has the potential ability to depress energy consumption. Ethanol is the main metabolic end product in anoxic Carassius, and the present study shows that the rate of ethanol excretion in anoxic crucian carp (Carassius carassius L.) can be increased threefold by treatment with the adenosine receptor antagonist aminophylline (75 mg/kg). By contrast, the same dose of aminophylline did not increase the rate of routine oxygen consumption during normoxia. It is hypothesized that adenosine acts as a metabolic depressant during anoxia in crucian carp.
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G. E. Nilsson and G. M. C. Renshaw Hypoxic survival strategies in two fishes: extreme anoxia tolerance in the North European crucian carp and natural hypoxic preconditioning in a coral-reef shark J. Exp. Biol., August 15, 2004; 207(18): 3131 - 3139. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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