Although ischemic preconditioning (IP) in several species can be pharmacologically mimicked by selective adenosine A(1) or A(3) receptor agonists, it is currently unclear which receptor subtype (A(1) and/or A(3)) is physiologically involved in mediating TP. To investigate this question, we determined (a) the affinity of adenosine for rabbit adenosine A(1) and A(3) receptors, and (b) the effects of selective rabbit A(1) receptor blockade on LP and adenosine-mediated cardioprotection in a rabbit Langendorff model of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. Adenosine was 19-fold selective for inhibition of N-6-(4-amino-3-[I-125]iodobenzyl)adenosine (I-125-ABA) binding to recombinant rabbit A(1) v rabbit A(3) receptors (A(1) K-i: 28 nM; A(3) K-i 532 nM). Buffer-perfused rabbit hearts were exposed to 30 min regional ischemia and 120 min of reperfusion, and infarct size was measured by tetrazolium staining and normalized for area-at-risk (IA/AAR). Ischemic preconditioning (5 min global ischemia and 10 min reperfusion) or adenosine (20 mu M, 5 min) perfusion reduced infarct size (IA/AAR) to 17 +/- 3 and 14 +/- 2%, respectively (controls: 59 +/- 2%). Ischemic preconditioning and adenosine-mediated cardioprotection were completely blocked (57 +/- 2 and 61 +/- 4% IA/AAR, respectively) in the presence of a rabbit A(1)-selective concentration (50 nM) of the antagonist BWA1433 (rabbit A(1) K-i: 3 nM; A(3) K-i; 746 nM). Thus, whereas recent studies have demonstrated that selective A(1) or A(3) receptor agonists can both pharmacologically mimic IP, the results of the present study suggest that the adenosine-mediated component of IP in the isolated rabbit heart is preferentially mediated by adenosine A(1) receptors. potentially due to adenosine's selectivity for this receptor subtype. (C) 1998 Academic Press Limited.