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Query: EC:2.4.2.7 (
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
)
692
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A method is presented for the two-dimensional thin-layer chromatographic screening of purines, pyrimidines and their nucleosides in the urine. Prior to chromatography, isolation of these substances from the urine is performed by anion-exchange column chromatography. Purines and pyramidines are quantitatively eluted with formic acid 0.01 M and 4 M respectively. The results of recovery and stability experiments are given. Normal excretory patterns are presented. Also results in patients with various diseases are shown: ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, adenosine deaminase deficiency,
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
deficiency,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
deficiency, xanthine oxidase deficiency and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency. Finally the pattern of a patient on treatment with allopurinol is given.
...
PMID:Two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography for the screening of disorders of purine and pyrimidine metabolism. 9 7
In a patient with paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria (PNH) enzymatic activities of erythrocytes and leucocytes were studied. Studies of autohaemolysis were also performed. The following erythrocytary enzymes were measured: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD), pyruvate kinase (PK), glutathione reductase (GR), and acetylcholinesterase (AcChE). The following enzymes were measured in leucocytes: Adenosine deaminase,
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and adenosine kinase. Normal activity of G-6-PD, GR and PK in erythrocytes was found. In leucocytes and lymphocytes activity of
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
was reduced. Auto-haemolysis in vitro was increased, which could not be compensated by addition of glucose or ATP.
...
PMID:Erythrocyte and leucocyte enzymes in a case of paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria. 10 10
Activities of adenosine deaminase (ADA), adenosine kinase (AK),
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
), hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT), and
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(
PNP
), all enzymes of the purine interconversion system, were determined in lymphocytes of 25 patients with chronic lymphatic leukemia (CLL) and in 23 controls. A statistically significant decrease of
PNP
activities and a reduction of ADA activities at borderline levels were found in the patients, whereas for the other enzymes assayed no deviation from normal values was observed.
...
PMID:Enzymes of the purine interconversion system in chronic lymphatic leukemia: decreased purine nucleoside phosphorylase and adenosine deaminase activity. 11 97
A model is proposed for the partial depletion of the adenine nucleotide pool in the ischemic perfused rat heart which involves seven enzymes: adenylate cyclase, 3',5'-cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase, adenosine kinase, adenosine deaminase,
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
, and inorganic pyrophosphatase. The computer implementation of this model is in terms of rate laws, several of which were obtained by a systematic least-squares fitting procedure. Depletion of the adenine nucleotide pool is initiated by the release of endogenous noradrenaline into the interstitial fluid, which results from a fall in tissue PO2, and the subsequent activation of adenylate cyclase. In this model the substrate for 5'-nucleotidase is a membrane-bound AMP pool formed by hydrolysis of extracellular fluid and functions as a vasodilator; excess adenosine is incorporated into the tissue by a "permease" with Michaelis-Menten kinetics and converted to AMP, inosine, and hypoxanthine. Alternative mechanisms, such as the deamination of AMP by adenylate deaminase and conversion of AMP to adenine by
AMP pyrophosphorylase
, were rejected primarily on qualitative biochemical grounds.
...
PMID:Computer simulation of ischemic rat heart purine metabolism. I. Model construction. 19 89
Mutations of the resistance to 2,6-diaminopurine (apt), which affect
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, fail to permit the growth of Escherichia coli pur mutants (purine auxotrophs which cannot make inosine monophosphate de novo) on the medium with 2,6-diaminopurine (DAP) as the sole source of purines. Addition of a small amount of hypoxantine, but not guanine, stimulated the growth of mutants of pur apt and pur apt+ genotypes on the medium with DAP. The utilization of DAP as purine source in the presence of hypoxantine is blocked by mutations guaC (guanosine monophosphate reductase), add (adenosine deaminase) and pup (purine necleoside phosphorylase), suggesting that DAP are utilized via
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
and adenosine deaminase. The drm mutation (that increases the level of pentose-1-phosphate in the cell) does not activate the utilization of DAP. The results indicate that a step, that limits the utilization of DAP as the sole source of purines by pur mutants of E. coli, is the deamination of DAP nucleoside.
...
PMID:[Genetic control of Escherichia coli K-12 strains' assimilation of 2,6-diaminopurine as a purine source]. 33 31
Independently obtained mutations (apt) of resistance to DAP (2,6-diaminopurine) and MP (6-methylpurine), that affect
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) in Escherichia coli, are different in their effect on the conversion of several substrates of
APRT
, such as DAP, MP, MAP (6-methylaminopurine) and adenine, to their nucleotide derivatives. Most of mutants were resistant to DAP and MP, unable to utilize MAP (as purine source) and differed in their ability to uptake adenine from the medium. Among the mutants capable to utilize adenine the following types are found: (1) resistant to DAP and MP, but capable of utilizing MAP, and (2) resistant to DAP, capable of utilizing MAP, but sensitive to MP. The gene apt encoding
APRT
is located between genes proC and purE; the frequency of cotransduction between proC and several apt mutations is found to be 1.7--2% and purE-apt--to be 5--10.8%. Mutations apt block up the ability of purine-dependent (pur) bacteria lacking
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(pup) to use purine ribonucleosides as purine sources. The degree of that blocking depends on the ability of apt mutants to convert adenine to AMP via
APRT
. These observations confirm our previous data, that the ability of pur pup mutants to use purine ribonucleosides depends on the activity of
APRT
.
...
PMID:[Mutations of resistance to 2,6-diaminopurine and 6-methylpurine that affect adenine phosphoribosyltransferase in Escherichia coli K-12]. 34 74
During the preparation of spheroplasts,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
EC 2.4.2.7
) and hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8) were released in parallel with cytidine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.5) and uridine phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.3), which, on other evidence, are considered to be located intracellularly. The two phosphoribosyltransferases and uridine phosphorylase were not significantly associated with purified membrane fractions as was
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(EC 2.4.2.1). The effects of the poorly permeable enzyme-inactivating reagents, 4-diazoniumbenzenesulphonate, 7-diazonium-1,3-naphthalene-disulphonate and 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulphonate, on Escherichia coli indicate that all the above-mentioned enzymes and also the xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase [Miller, Ramsey, Krenitsky & Elion (1972) Biochemistry 11, 4723--4731] are located intracellularly.
...
PMID:The location of purine phosphoribosyltransferase activities in Escherichia coli. 36 72
Strains of Escherichia coli K-12 defective in
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(pup gene) formed on the medium with inosine as the source of carbon and energy phenotypical reversions for the ability of utilizing inosine as source of carbon or purines. The phenotypical suppression of the
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
deficiency is the result of the mutations (called pnd), which are mapped on the chromosome of E. coli beyond the region of the structural pup-gene location and have phenotypic manifestation distinct from that of pup+ allele: a) pnd mutants divide into some groups for the ability of utilizing several purine nucleosides, including xantosine that cannot be metabolized by pnd+ strains of E. coli; b) pnd mutations do not restore the ability of purine auxotrophs (pur) defective in
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(pup) and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(apt) to grow on the medium with adenine as the sole source of purines. Cell-free extracts of pnd mutants fail to degrade the guanine nucleosides in the absence of phosphate or arsenate ions. These data (and also the ability of pnd mutants to utilize both purine ribonucleosides and deoxyribonucleosides) seem to indicate that the activities induced by pnd mutations are phosphorylase activities.
...
PMID:[Escherichia coli K-12 mutants capable of catabolizing purine nucleosides in the absence of purine nucleoside phosphorylase]. 41 Jul 1
Uptake of adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil by an uncA strain of Escherichia coli is inhibited by uncouplers or when phosphate in the medium is replaced by less than 1 mM-arsenate, indicating a need for both a protonmotive force and phosphorylated metabolites. The rate of uptake of adenine or hypoxanthine was not markedly affected by a genetic deficiency of
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
. In two mutants with undetected
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, the rate of adenine uptake was about 30% of that in their parent strain, and evidence was obtained to confirm that adenine had then been utilized via
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
. In a strain deficient in both enzymes adenine uptake was about 1% of that shown by wild-type strains. Uptake of hypoxanthine was similarly limited in a strain lacking
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. Deficiency of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase severely limits uracil uptake, but the defect can be circumvented by addition of inosine, which presumably provides ribose 1-phosphate for reversal of uridine phosphorylase. The results indicate that there are porter systems for adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil dependent on a protonmotive force and facilitated by intracellular metabolism of the free bases.
...
PMID:Transport of adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil into Escherichia coli. 41 44
A group of enzymes known to be involved in group translocation-type transport mechanisms for the uptake of a variety of nucleotide precursors are enzymatically active both in their natural membrane milieu and in aqueous solution. The activity in aqueous solution markedly differ, however, from the enzymatic activity when the enzyme is membrane localized. The
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(PRT) of E. coli (Hochstadt-Ozer and Stadtman, 71a) is capable of carrying out an exchange reaction between the base moieties of adenine and AMP without requiring P-ribose-PP as an intermediate; the enzyme in aqueous solution requires P-ribose-PP, indicating a different reaction mechanism in the two environments. Like the adenine PRT of E. coli, the hypoxanthine PRT of Salmonella typhimurium (Jackman and Hochstadt, '76) also carried out an exchange reaction on the membrane only and also is more sensitive to a number of inhibitors in aqueous solution relative to the sensitivity when embedded in the membrane. In addition, however, the hypoxanthine PRT, while restricted to hypoxanthine as a substrate in the membrane, also accepts guanine as substrate in its soluble form. The membrane capacities reas determined in a guanine PRT deletion strain (Jackman and Hochstadt, '76). Finally, in mammalian cell lines
purine nucleoside phosphorylase
, which translocates the ribose moiety of inosine across the plasma membrane of mouse fibroblasts undergoes a 30-fold increase in substrate turnover number upon liberation from the membrane. These data raise two important caveats with respect to study of membrane enzymes and transport. Firstly, an enzyme once solubilized and found to differ kinetically from substrate transport in situ cannot be excluded from participating in translocations in the membrane on the basis of its activity in aqueous solution. Secondly, an enzyme which "appears" largely soluble upon cell rupture cannot be assumed to be a cycloplasmic enzyme because of majority of the solubilized activity may represent only a small fraction of the enzyme molecules highly activated concomitant to their solubilization. In this latter case the ability to activate enzyme still residing on the membrane (e.g., with detergents) would be necessary in order to estimate total membrane associated activity after cell rupture.
...
PMID:The function and activity of certain membrane enzymes when localized on- and off- the membrane. 82 51
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