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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)

The process of osmotic shock, which has been used to release degradative enzymes from Escherichia coli, can be applied successfully to other members of the Enterobacteriaceae. Cyclic phosphodiesterase (3'-nucleotidase), 5'-nucleotidase (diphosphate sugar hydrolase), acid hexose phosphatase, and acid phenyl phosphatase are released from Shigella, Enterobacter, Citrobacter, and Serratia strains. Some strains of Salmonella also release these enzymes. Members of Proteus and Providencia groups fail to release enzymes when subjected to osmotic shock and do not show a lag in regrowth, although they do release their acid-soluble nucleotide pools. In contrast to E. coli, release of enzymes from other members of the Enterobacteriaceae studied is affected by growth conditions and strain of organism. None of the organisms was as stable to osmotic shock in exponential phase of growth as was E. coli. Exponential-phase cells of Shigella, Enterobacter, and Citrobacter could be shocked only with 0.5 mm MgCl(2) to prevent irreparable damage to the cells. These observations suggest that this group of degradative enzymes is probably loosely bound to the cytoplasmic membrane through the mediation of divalent cations.
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PMID:Release of surface enzymes in Enterobacteriaceae by osmotic shock. 429 95

A number of "surface" enzymes of Escherichia coli (i.e., among those selectively released by osmotic shock) all displayed higher specific activities in extracts of minicells than in extracts of typical rod forms; these enzymes included alkaline phosphatase, cyclic phosphodiesterase, acid hexose monophosphatase, 5'-nucleotidase, and ribonuclease I. In addition, alkaline phosphatase, cyclic phosphodiesterase, and acid hexose monophosphatase were cytochemically localized to regions of minicell periplasm that resembled reactive polar enlargements of the periplasm in rod forms. In contrast, a number of "internal" cytoplasmic enzymes (inorganic pyrophosphatase, beta-galactosidase, glutamine synthetase, polynucleotide phosphorylase, and ribonuclease II) showed elevated or similar specific activities in extracts of rod forms versus extracts of minicells. A specific heat-labile inhibitor for 5'-nucleotidase, known to occur in the cytoplasm, also showed no enrichment in minicells. These findings indicate that the "surface" enzymes are segregated in vivo into the terminal minicell buds, possibly because these enzymes are concentrated in the polar enlargements of the periplasm in typical rod forms.
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PMID:Biochemical and cytochemical evidence for the polar concentration of periplasmic enzymes in a "minicell" strain of Escherichia coli. 431 25

1. A simple new assay for glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase is described, in which radioactive glycerylphosphorylcholine is used as substrate and the reaction products are separated by adsorption on an anion-exchange resin. 2. Rat liver subcellular fractions contained both particulate (58%) and soluble (42%) glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase. Both activities released free choline from glycerylphosphorylcholine. 3. The particulate glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase was recovered mainly in the nuclear and microsomal fractions and showed a distribution similar to those of 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I, both of which are constituents of the liver plasma membrane. 4. During purification of plasma membranes glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I showed largely similar behaviour, indicating that glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase is also localized in liver plasma membranes. Slight differences in the distributions of these three enzymes in density-gradient separations are discussed in relation to the possibility that they are unevenly distributed on different areas of the cell surface. 5. The differences between glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I indicate that these two activities are not functions of a single enzyme. 6. The glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase of liver plasma membranes has a pH optimum of 8.5 and a K(m) for glycerylphosphorylcholine of 0.95mm. It is inhibited by EDTA and fully reactivated by a variety of bivalent cations (and Fe(3+)).
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PMID:Glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase in rat liver. Subcellular distribution and localization in plasma membranes. 434 52

We describe an abrupt increase (at 32 degrees ) in the energy of activation for the reaction of hepatic adenylyl cyclase in the presence of glucagon or epinephrine. This increase is not seen in the presence of fluoride, prostaglandin E(1), or 1-propanol, or in the absence of cyclase stimulators. The change in energy of activation found with hormones is abolished by 1-propanol. This change does not represent differences in hormone or substrate binding at different temperatures, but seems to reflect interactions among elements of the cyclase stimulation sequence. Similar changes in energy of activation were not observed for alkaline phosphatase, cyclic AMP-phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase, or ouabain-sensitive ATPase. Since the mole fraction of cholesterol in liver membranes is sufficiently high to preclude a phase change in bulk membrane lipids, our observation suggests either that cyclase is restricted to cholesterol-poor membrane regions or that the change in its energy of activation is largely restricted to protein components of the cyclase apparatus. The data are compatible with fundamental differences in the stimulation process(es) for the hormones (glucagon and epinephrine) as compared with those for fluoride and prostaglandin E(1).
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PMID:A temperature-sensitive change in the energy of activation of hormone-stimulated hepatic adenylyl cyclase. 435 55

1. A mouse liver plasma-membrane preparation was solubilized in an N-dodecylsarcosinate-Tris buffer, pH7.8, and the proteins and glycoproteins were separated by a rate-zonal centrifugation in sucrose-detergent gradients. 2. A peak of alkaline phosphodiesterase activity which sedimented ahead of the 5'-nucleotidase peak was associated with a major glycoprotein component of the plasma membrane. 3. The phosphodiesterase activity was then purified further by gel filtration and gave a single glycoprotein band after electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels. The apparent molecular weight of the polypeptide at pH7.4 and 8.9 was 128000-130000 and was independent of the polyacrylamide concentration. Electrophoresis in gels containing deoxycholate showed that the protein band was coincident with phosphodiesterase activity. 4. After two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis, with agarose containing rabbit anti-(mouse plasma-membrane) antiserum as second dimension, the enzyme showed one component which was also coincident with the phosphodiesterase activity. 5. An amino acid composition of the glycoprotein is presented. Carbohydrate analysis indicated the presence of glucosamine, neutral sugars and sialic acid. 6. The enzyme was also a nucleotide pyrophosphatase, as shown by a similar enrichment during purification of activity towards ATP, NAD(+), UDP-galactose and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine. The phosphodiesterase activity, measured by using dTMP p-nitrophenyl ester as substrate, was competitively inhibited by nucleotide pyrophosphate substrates. The enzyme showed little or no activity towards RNA, cyclic AMP, AMP, ADP and glycerylphosphorylcholine. 7. The significance of this enzyme activity in the plasma membrane is discussed.
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PMID:Purification and properties of a mouse liver plasma-membrane glycoprotein hydrolysing nucleotide pyrophosphate and phosphodiester bonds. 436 Feb 50

All members of the Enterobacteriaceae possess distinct 5'-nucleotidases and cyclic phosphodiesterases (3'-nucleotidases) that can be differentiated from the acid and alkaline phosphatases and the acid sugar hydrolases. The nucleotidases and cyclic phosphodiesterases of the various Enterobacteriaceae are remarkably similar in properties. All of the 5'-nucleotidases hydrolyze 5'-nucleotides, adenosine triphosphate, and uridine diphosphoglucose. Their pH optimum is from 5.7 to 6.1. The cyclic phosphodiesterases hydrolyze 3'-nucleotides, cyclic phosphonucleotides, bis-(p-nitrophenyl)phosphate, and p-nitrophenylphosphate. Their pH optimum is from 7.2 to 7.8. For both enzymes, cobalt showed optimal metal stimulation. An intracellular protein inhibitor for the 5'-nucleotidase is present in all of the Enterobacteriaceae. No inhibitor of cyclic phosphodiesterase activity exists, although hydrolysis of both cyclic phosphonucleotides and 3'-nucleotides is inhibited by ribonucleic acid. Neither of the enzymes is subject to control by phosphate level or by catabolite repression. Of the other bacteria studied, only Haemophilus and Bacillus subtilis contained significant 3'- or 5'-nucleotidase activity.
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PMID:The 5'-nucleotidases and cyclic phosphodiesterases (3'-nucleotidases) of the Enterobacteriaceae. 496 71

1. Proteins of fat-globule membrane from bovine milk were solubilized with the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100 in the presence of protease inhibitors. Approximately 25% of the total membrane protein was solubilized and the extracts were shown to contain a sample of most of the major membrane proteins and glycoproteins. 2. The solubilized proteins were separated in flat-beds of Ultrodex by electrofocusing and the pI values for the major proteins, glycoproteins and certain enzymes determined. Several of the proteins displayed marked heterogeneity indicating the existence of protein variants and isoenzymes. Principal pI values for the enzymes assayed were as follows: xanthine oxidase, 7.35--7.55; NADH2: iodonitrotetrazolium reductase, less than 4.5; 5'-nucleotidase, 7.15--7.4; alkaline phosphatase, 5.4--5.7; phosphodiesterase, 4.6--4.8; gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, 4.4--4.55. 3. Fractions after electrofocusing were analyzed by 'fused rocket' immunoelectrophoresis and crossed immunoelectrophoresis after separation in polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulphate. Major antigens of the membrane include xanthine oxidase and glycoproteins of apparent molecular weights 67 000, 49 500 and 46 000. The latter two components share common antigenic determinants and could not be separated by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, lectin-affinity chromatography or preparative electrofocusing.
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PMID:Separation of the proteins of bovine milk-fat-globule membrane by electrofocusing with retention of enzymatic and immunological activity. 610 13

Pyrophosphate, p-nitrophenyl phosphate and a variety of pyrimidine and purine nucleotides are hydrolyzed by the solubilized membrane-bound enzymes of the brush border plasma membrane of Hymenolepis diminuta. The pH optima (or ranges) for hydrolysis of substrates are 8.0 (pyrophosphate), 8.8 (p-nitrophenyl phosphate), 8.4-8.9 (nucleoside monophosphates), and 7.1-8.1 (nucleoside triphosphates); all substrates, with the exception of nucleoside triphosphates, have a higher affinity for the solubilized enzyme at pH 7.4 than at their optimal pH for hydrolysis. ATP is degraded completely by the enzyme preparation to adenosine and inorganic phosphate, but since neither ADP nor ATP accumulate in the incubation medium it is not known whether ATP hydrolysis involves the sequential hydrolysis of terminal phosphate groups. Isoelectric focusing and various chromatographic procedures (gel permeation, ion-exchange and hydrophobic interaction chromatography) fail to separate the alkaline phosphatase, phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase, adenosine triphosphatase and ribonuclease activities associated with the solubilized membrane preparation. Additionally, inhibitor studies indicate that only a single enzyme with low substrate specificity is involved in the hydrolysis of nucleotides, p-nitrophenyl phosphate, pyrophosphate and hexose phosphate esters. Purines and pyrimidines and their nucleosides interact with the active site, and in some instances activity of the enzyme is stimulated by an unknown mechanism.
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PMID:Nucleotide hydrolysis by solubilized membrane-bound enzymes of the brush border plasma membrane of Hymenolepis diminuta. 613 88

Plasma membranes of vertebrate lens fiber cells contain large numbers of gap junctions that may provide pathways for metabolic cooperation. Characterization of fiber cell gap junctions is thus necessary to understand this function. In this study, plasma membrane fractions were isolated from bovine lens according to established techniques, but without urea, detergents, or proteolytic enzymes. Electron microscopy indicated that isolated plasma membranes with gap junctions form double-membrane vesicles, and gap junctions comprised approximately 35% of the total membrane area in the crude fraction. These vesicles were impermeable to cationized ferritin, suggesting that they were sealed, and may be useful for permeability studies. Treatment of the crude fraction with 2.5% beta-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol caused reversible separation of junctional membranes, suggesting that disulfide bonds may be important in maintaining gap junction structure. Fractions with varying proportions of gap junctions were isolated using linear sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The proportional area of gap junction membrane versus total membrane in the various fractions ranged from 10% to at least 51%. The following plasma membrane enzymes were assayed in all fractions: Mg++-ATPase, Ca++-ATPase, alkaline phosphatase, phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase, and Na+, K+-ATPase. There was no correlation between enzyme activity and gap junction enrichment. This suggests that these enzymes are not associated with fiber cell gap junctions.
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PMID:Biochemical and structural characterization of membrane fractions from bovine lens. 613 51

The activity of adenylate cyclase (Ac), cAMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) and 5'-nucleotidase was studied in plasma membranes from the liver of rat embryo of the 20th day of development normally and after exposure to ionizing radiation. Gamma-irradiation of plasma membranes with doses ranging from 0.1 to 100 kR was shown to inhibit the activity of Ac, this effect being more pronounced during stimulation with higher doses of isoproterenol. The activity of 5'-nucleotidase and PDE remained unchanged up to the dose of 100 kR.
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PMID:[Radiation modulation of the activity of the enzymatic systems in isolated plasma membranes in early ontogeny]. 624 41


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