Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.5 (5'-nucleotidase)
3,167 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Purine metabolism and reutilization pathways were studied as they applied to normal and leukemic leukocytes. The enzyme activities were expressed in terms of the quantity of protein extracted and per 10(10) cells. Whereas the protein extracted and the enzyme activities from normal lymphocytes were relatively constant, considerable variation was noted in cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). This variability in the properties of the leukemic cells suggests that the difference may be useful in the subclassification of the leukemias. The studies of the complete enzyme system were done with 300 million cells. The extraction of 350,000 normal lymphocytes/mul gave a soluble protein concentration of 1.46+/-0.16 mg protein per ml, and the yield from the same number of CLL lymphocytes varied between 0.72 and 8.32 mg protein per ml. The 5'-nucleotidase activity gave an inverse correlation with the amount of extractable protein. In individual cases of CLL, the protein concentrations and the 5'-nucleotidase activities were found on either side of the normal values. In most cases, the adenosine deaminase of CLL lymphocytic cell extracts was lower than normal, and the adenosine kinase was higher; in the CLL cells, these two enzymes gave a positive correlation with one another. Little or no difference was observed in the activities of the purine nucleoside phosphorylases in extracts of normal or leukemic lymphocytes and granulocytes. The hypoxanthine-guanine and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activities increased in the leukemic granulocytes but almost always showed a decrease in the CLL lymphocytes when compared with the normal cells. Most of the leukemic cells had greater than normal activities of the enzymes synthesizing phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate when tested with the purines. The total nucleotide produced from adenine and guanine with adenine- and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase was about equal in normal and leukemic lymphocytes, but the proportion of the adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the product was much greater with the leukemic cells. This suggested that the ribosyltransferase activities were the same in both types of cells, but the nucleoside kinases and the nucleoside diphosphate kinases were more active in the leukemic cells. Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase was less active than normal in the CLL cell extracts and was not directly related to the amount of inosine monophosphate generated from hypoxanthine.
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PMID:Purine metabolic cycle in normal and leukemic leukocytes. 18 45

The enzyme, 5'-nucleotidase (5'N) (E.C.-3.1.3.5) is present in lymphocytes isolated from the blood of normal subjects. This activity is markedly decreased or not detectable in the cells from three-quarters of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), while supranormal levels are found in less than 10% of the cases. To determine whether the decreased 5'N value in CLL represents a lower activity per cell or fewer enzyme-containing cells than in the normal, conditions were established for the histochemical measurement of 5'N in human lymphocytes. It was found that the cells isolated from the blood of normal subjects or patients with CLL consist of 5'N-positive and 5'N-negative subpopulations. Normal subjects who had high 5'N specific activity were shown to have a greater percentage of 5'N-positive cells than individuals with low 5'N activity. Patients with CLL who had no activity by standard chemical assay had no 5'N-positive cells, while the exceptional patient with CLL with a higher than normal specific activity showed an percentage of 5'N-positive cells. It is suggested that the selective proliferation of 5'N-positive and 5'N-negative populations may account for the heterogeneity of 5'N in CLL.
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PMID:Human lymphocytes: 5'-nucleotidase-positive and -negative subpopulations. 118 53

2-Chlorodeoxyadenosine (CdA) is active in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, hairy-cell leukemia, and low-grade lymphomas. In part, this spectrum of activity may be attributable to the selective toxicity of CdA to nondividing lymphocytes and monocytes. However, CdA is unstable at acidic pH and is degraded by bacterial nucleoside phosphorylases. The present experiments demonstrate that the 2'-arabino-fluoro derivative of CdA, designated CAFdA, is also directly toxic to quiescent lymphocytes and macrophages. Unlike CdA, CAFdA was stable at pH 2 and resisted degradation by Escherichia coli nucleoside phosphorylase. Cell killing was preceded by the formation of DNA strand breaks and could be prevented by supplementation of the medium with deoxycytidine. The initial DNA damage initiated the pattern of oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis. Mutant lymphoblasts, deficient in deoxycytidine kinase, with elevated cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase, or with expanded deoxynucleotide pools secondary to increased ribonucleotide reductase activity, were cross-resistant to both CAFdA and CdA toxicity. One-week oral treatment with CAFdA (1 mg/ml in drinking water) achieved an average plasma concentration of 0.56 microM and eliminated 90% of chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells transplanted into severe combined immunodeficiency (scid) mice. Under the same conditions, CdA was much less active. Collectively, these results suggest that CAFdA could be effective as an oral agent in indolent lymphoproliferative diseases and in autoimmune diseases where lymphocyte and monocyte depletion is desirable.
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PMID:Oral antilymphocyte activity and induction of apoptosis by 2-chloro-2'-arabino-fluoro-2'-deoxyadenosine. 134 62

Activities of adenosine deaminase (ADA) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) as well as their ratio in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) were found to be several times lower as compared with normal cells and to depend upon the duration and severity of leukemic process. Ratio of ADA and PNP activities in CLL was inverted as compared with those of normal cells; 5'-nucleotidase activity varied within all the stages of the disease from zero values to supernormals. There was a correlation between beneficial effects of treatment of the CLL patients and an increase in ADA and PNP activities in their peripheral lymphocytes.
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PMID:[Enzymes of purine nucleotide catabolism in lymphocytes in normal states and in chronic lymphoid leukemia]. 299 63

5'Nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5), a purine pathway enzyme, occurs as a cellular ectoenzyme. Widely differing 5'N activity has been reported in different types of lymphoid cells and appears to be related to lymphocyte function, differentiation and immunological subtype. This paper reports a study on the ultrastructural distribution of 5'N in in different types of lymphoid leukemias and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. In lymphoid leukemias, only cALL cells showed strong 5'N staining. In CLL, PLL and HCL the intensity of staining was less than in normal cells. In the NHL group, the reaction pattern was mixed. Infiltrating neoplastic cells, specially the large lymphoid cells, consistently showed very mild activity of the enzyme, whereas follicular center cells and other mature lymphocytes were characterized by moderately strong to strong 5'N activity. These results support the view that 5'N is a marker of lymphocyte cell differentiation.
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PMID:Ultrastructural localization of 5'nucleotidase in human normal and malignant lymphoid cells. 300 82

Differences in activities of the purine degradative enzymes, adenosine deaminase (ADA), purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), and 5'-nucleotidase (5'NT), have been observed among different classes of lymphoid malignancies. Recent studies have shown that hairy cell leukemia (HCL) may respond to treatment with the ADA inhibitor, 2-deoxycoformycin. This study demonstrates that the cells of HCL have significantly lower levels of ADA and 5'NT (P always less than 0.01) when compared to levels in normal B- or T-lymphocytes, but have higher levels of PNP (P less than 0.001 for both comparisons). Recent studies have shown that when treated with 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), cells of B-cell chronic lymphatic leukemia (B-CLL) acquire phenotypic characters of HCL. The authors have therefore also investigated the changes in enzyme pattern of B-CLL after incubation with TPA B-CLL cells are characterized by low levels of ADA, PNP, and 5'-NT, but TPA caused a marked increase in PNP activity (P less than 0.001, t test for paired samples), a pattern similar to HCL. The results from biochemical studies are thus in accordance with the hypothesis that HCL cells are more mature than B-CLL cells. The special enzyme profile of HCL suggests that a PNP inhibitor might also be effective in the treatment of this disease.
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PMID:Enzymes of purine metabolism in hairy cell leukemia. 301 Dec 39

The specific activity of 5'-nucleotidase was determined in lymphocyte plasma membranes from 14 normal subjects and 10 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Whereas the enzyme was present in the preparation from normal lymphocytes, in 7 out of 10 CLL patients the membranes had markedly decreased or no detectable 5'-nucleotidase activity. The lack of this activity from the lymphocytes of most patients with CLL constitutes an alteration in a plasma membrane enzyme from the normal cell. The presence of the enzyme in the lymphocytes of some patients with CLL and its decrease in others provide further evidence for biochemical heterogeneity among patients with this disorder.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of 5'-nucleotidase activity in lymphocytes in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 470 Apr 98

Leukemic cells incubated in vitro with 2'-deoxyadenosine (dAdo) plus an inhibitor of adenosine deaminase, 2'-deoxy-coformycin (DCF), show different metabolic responses depending on the histologic and immunologic type of the leukemia. Leukemic cells were obtained from 54 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 9 with myeloid or nonlymphoblastic leukemia, 3 with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), and 3 with lymphoma. There was a wide variation in the LD50, the concentration of dAdo that caused 50% inhibition of the incorporation of 3H-thymidine into cells in the presence of 20 microM DCF. T-cell leukemia specimens were much more sensitive to dAdo than were specimens of pre-B-ALL and null-ALL. In leukemic cells that had been incubated with 14C-dAdo plus DCF, a good correlation was observed between the LD50 and the ratio of 14C-deoxyATP to ATP (correlation coefficient for the fit to a hyperbola = 0.853). The accumulation of deoxyATP by the leukemic cell specimens was correlated best with the activity of ecto-ATPase, less well with cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase and deoxyadenosine kinase, and poorly with adenosine deaminase and ecto-5'-nucleotidase. The clinical response to DCF therapy of a patient with T-ALL and another with pre-B-ALL was consistent with the in vitro metabolic response of their cells to DCF and dAdo.
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PMID:Biochemical correlates of the differential sensitivity of subtypes of human leukemia to deoxyadenosine and deoxycoformycin. 628 41

The enzyme 5'-nucleotidase (5'-N) was demonstrated cytochemically in blood cells using a modification of the Wachstein and Meisel technique [30]. In peripheral blood the activity was found to be localised mainly in the cell membrane of lymphocytes. A semiquantitative score of 5'-N positivity, was assessed in lymphocytes from eight normal donors and 60 patients with various types of leukaemia and lymphoma. The lymphocyte score of 5'-N was slightly reduced in CML and AML but markedly reduced in most lymphoproliferative states tested. The only supranormal activity was found in two of 18 cases of CLL.
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PMID:5'-Nucleotidase in lymphocytes from various clinical disorders. 630 May 63

In order to study if enzymes of purine metabolism could be used as cell markers in B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), the activities of adenosine deaminase (ADA), purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), and 5'-nucleotidase (5'N) were repeatedly measured in blood mononuclear cells from B-CLL patients and were compared to those obtained in normal controls. Enzyme activities in patients were also compared to other biological parameters indicative of B-CLL to activities of ADA and PNP in erythrocytes. Results show that B-leukemic cells display abnormal enzyme patterns: subnormal ADA activity is characteristic; 5'N activity is depressed in 60% of the cases but increased in 15%. An inverse relationship between PNP activity and corresponding lymphocytosis is observed in leukemic but not in normal cells. The enzymatic anomalies seem to be linked to the presence of an unusual peripheral lymphocytic population, induced by the leukemic process. Indeed, ADA and PNP are not abnormal in erythrocytes. In untreated nonevolutive patients, the enzyme profile tends to remain stable throughout the course of the illness; normalization of enzyme patterns in treated patients occurs only when therapy induces improvement in T and B cell distribution.
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PMID:Enzymes of purine metabolism in B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 633 Nov 55


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