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)

Mature macrophages (Mph) differentiated in culture from normal human peripheral blood monocytes (Mo) exhibit low activity as accessory cells (antigen-presenting cells) in T lymphocyte stimulation. A test system was established based on mitogenicity to quantitate the accessory activity of Mph-derived cells and to follow its changes for several days. The system used accessory cells treated with the oxidative mitogen, sodium periodate. The cells were subsequently co-cultured with pooled human lymphocytes from a cryopreserved stock. DNA synthesis in these cells was used as an indicator of accessory activity. Mph could be converted within 5-6 days into highly active accessory cells if a continuous stimulus of exogenously added dibutyryl cyclic AMP (db-cAMP) was provided. Mph treated by db-cAMP retained a high degree of HLA-DR expression but typical Mph markers such as non-specific esterase, phagocytosis, and expression of Fc-receptors were down-regulated. Acid phosphatase and myeloperoxidase underwent only slight changes, while the monocyte marker 5'-nucleotidase remained undetectable. Morphologically, the cells rounded up and developed veils and dendritiform elongations. In contrast to dendritic cells, Mph-derived accessory cells retained the CD14 antigen characteristic of monocytes and Mph. It is concluded that Mph are able to respond to exogenous stimuli and to convert into a highly active accessory cell. This contrasts to the well-known state of the 'activated Mph' with respect to markers and function. Both states appear to be antagonistically controlled by intracellular second messengers, as the accessory cell phenotype is positively correlated with intracellular cyclic AMP increase, whereas Mph activation correlates with cyclic GMP increase.
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PMID:Accessory phenotype and function of macrophages induced by cyclic adenosine monophosphate. 196 93

Horseradish peroxidase (HRP, 10 mg/100 g body weight) was intravenously injected into rats in order to investigate the nature of the compartments involved in the transcellular transport of the protein through hepatocytes into bile. Double cytochemistry for HRP and the marker enzymes for cytoplasmic organelles was used. HRP was shown to be taken up by hepatocytes via vesicles at the sinusoidal surface, some of which were positive for 5'-nucleotidase activity. HRP was then found in the smooth-surfaced vesicles and tubules which were negative in 5'-nucleotidase, glucose 6-phosphatase, thiamine pyrophosphatase and acid phosphatase activity, suggesting that the tubular structures are neither the endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi apparatus nor lysosomes. Biochemical studies revealed that the lead procedures used for the double cytochemistry did not inhibit the peroxidatic activity of HRP, and conversely that HRP did not interfere with the marker enzyme activity. Such cytochemical observations seemed to be supported by the observation that administration of monensin (3.5 mg/100 g) and chloroquine (5 mg/100 g), which markedly altered the structure of the Golgi apparatus and lysosomes, respectively, slightly altered the biliary excretion of HRP but not to a significant extent.
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PMID:Cytochemical examination of the compartments involved in the transcellular transport of horseradish peroxidase in rat hepatocytes. 208 41

Guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) are linked to a large number of surface membrane receptors and appear to regulate a variety of effector systems located both in the plasma membrane and in other parts of the cell. The mechanism of the disseminative actions of G proteins remains obscure. During an investigation of the fate of two types of G proteins, Gs and Gi, in rat adipocytes, we unexpectedly found that isoproterenol, which stimulates cAMP levels and lipolysis in these cells, induces parallel increases in both Gs and Gi in a low-density microsomal fraction rich in endosomes and Golgi bodies. Two plasma membrane constitutive enzymes, adenylyl cyclase and 5'-nucleotidase, are also elevated in this fraction. NaF and NaN3, metabolic inhibitors, block the redistribution process. The isoproterenol-stimulated shifts are completely reversible after removal of the hormone, indicating a recycling, endocytic process. The endocytic process seems to be fluid phase endocytosis, or pinocytosis, since isoproterenol stimulates the uptake of both fluorescent-labeled dextran and horseradish peroxidase into the same vesicles containing Gs. However, the vesicles that accumulate in response to isoproterenol seem heterogenous in properties that may reflect the lipolytic process induced by isoproterenol. It is speculated that the "pinosomes" formed in response to lipolytic hormones may continually produce signals within the cellular interior during their processing and cycling. Hence, signal production in response to hormones need not be confined to the cell membrane; circulating pinosomes may be responsible for some of the disseminative effects of hormones.
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PMID:Isoproterenol stimulates shift of G proteins from plasma membrane to pinocytotic vesicles in rat adipocytes: a possible means of signal dissemination. 210 98

Acetylcholine and ATP are costored and coreleased during synaptic activity at the electric organ of Torpedo. It has been suggested that released ATP is converted to adenosine at the synaptic cleft, and in turn this nucleoside would depress the evoked release of acetylcholine. In the present communication we have used a chemiluminescent reaction that let us to monitor continuously the presence of adenosine in this preparation. The chemiluminescent reaction is based on the conversion of adenosine into uric acid and H2O2 by adenosine deaminase, nucleoside phosphorylase, and xanthine oxidase enzymes. The hydrogen peroxide has been detected by peroxidase-luminol mixture. The reaction has a sensitivity on the picomol range and discerned between Adenosine, AMP, ADP, and ATP. We have developed this technique in the hope of understanding whether adenosine is released during synaptic activity or it comes from the released ATP. We have studied the release or formation of adenosine in fragments of the electric organ and in isolated cholinergic nerve terminals obtained from it. In both conditions we have followed the effect of potassium stimulation upon the detection of adenosine. Potassium stimulation increased the extracellular adenosine either in slices or the synaptosomal fraction of Torpedo electric organ. The presence of alpha, beta-methylene ADP, an inhibitor of 5'-nucleotidase, inhibits the detection of adenosine, suggesting that extracellular adenosine is a consequence of ectocellular dephosphorylation of released ATP.
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PMID:The release of adenosine at the electric organ of Torpedo. A study using a continuous chemiluminescent method. 232 27

NADH oxidase activity has been detected at the ultrastructural level using cerium ions to trap H2O2 generated by the enzyme (via intermediate reactive oxygen species). In an attempt to localize NADH oxidase activity at the light microscope level using the cerium-diaminobenzidine (DAB)-nickel-H2O2, the cerium-DAB-cobalt-H2O2 or the cerium-alkaline lead procedures, the distribution patterns of the revealed enzyme were found to be identical to those for non-specific alkaline phosphatase and especially 5'-nucleotidase activity. With the cerium-DAB-cobalt-H2O2 visualization procedure, the distribution pattern of the final reaction product was similar to that obtained with the other two techniques but much less final reaction product was formed. Incubations for NADH oxidase activity performed in the presence of exogenous catalase or in the absence of catalase or peroxidase inhibitors did not affect the staining intensity, whereas inhibitors of 5'-nucleotidase (EDTA) and non-specific alkaline phosphatase (levamisole) always did. Therefore, phosphatases contribute to the formation of the final reaction product. Since NADH initially cannot be hydrolysed by either of these two phosphatases, then presumably nucleotide pyrophosphatase (E.C.3.6.1.9) cleaves NADH into 5'-AMP and nicotinamide mononucleotide in a first step. Both nucleotides can be hydrolysed further by the two monophosphatases. These then generate cerium phosphate which is detected by the DAB-nickel-H2O2, DAB-cobalt-H2O2 or lead visualization methods.
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PMID:Pitfalls in the light microscopical detection of NADH oxidase. 236 89

Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-D) was used to resolve the plasma membrane proteins from cultured human retinal pigment epithelial cells. The cells were metabolically labeled either with [35S]methionine to reveal proteins in general or with [3H]glucosamine or [3H]fucose which are more specific for glycoprotein visualization. The cell surface proteins were also iodinated, using the lactoperoxidase--glucose oxidase technique. These labeled membranes were separate into plasma membrane-enriched fractions by subjecting the water-shocked postnuclear supernatant to a discontinuous sucrose-density gradient. The five resulting membrane fractions were assayed for protein, RNA (microsomes), galactosyltransferase (Golgi membranes), 5'-nucleotidase (plasma membranes), and succinate dehydrogenase (mitochondrial membranes) and were examined by electron microscopy. The plasma membranes were enriched with minimal contamination at the 0.6-0.85 M (F2) and 0.85-1.0 M (F3) sucrose interfaces based on these biochemical and morphological criteria. Examination of 2-D autoradiographic profiles of F2 and F3 showed that approximately 180 proteins or protein subunits had incorporated [35S]methionine. Certain proteins were also labeled by [3H]glucosamine and [3H]fucose, and surface-labeled by iodination. This was especially true of 17 different high-molecular-weight (43-139 X 10(3) MW) very acidic glycoproteins which formed a constellation of spots. These glycoproteins, as well as others, were also seen in the whole-cell acidic glucosamine-labeled 2-D profiles, where about 150 proteins were detected. A total of 39 proteins were catalogued, of which 34 were detectable in the plasma membrane-enriched fractions. The results show that the use of subcellular fractionation, specific precursors, and labeling techniques aids in the detection and characterization of minor proteins in 2-D gels.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of plasma membrane proteins of cultured human retinal pigment epithelium. 243 67

Primitive macrophages first appear in the blood islands of the mouse yolk sac on the ninth day of gestation. After the tenth day of fetal life, these cells differentiate into fetal macrophages and become mature, with the development of intracellular organelles. They appear in the mesenchymal layer and further immigrate into the extraembryonic coelom. The fetal macrophages do not show any cytochemical peroxidase or 5'-nucleotidase activity, and they possess a marked proliferative capacity. Promonocytes or monocytes that have an incomplete ultrastructure emerge in the blood islands of the yolk sac a day after the occurrence of the fetal macrophages. These events suggest that fetal macrophages differentiate from primitive macrophages before the development of promonocytes or monocytes in the mouse yolk sac; they actively proliferate and are colonized into the embryonic tissues. These results also indicate that the ontogeny of the monocyte/macrophage is different in the early embryo compared with its later developmental stages.
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PMID:Differentiation, maturation, and proliferation of macrophages in the mouse yolk sac: a light-microscopic, enzyme-cytochemical, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural study. 253 95

In order to label the vesicles involved in transcellular transfer (transcytosis) through hepatocytes, polymeric IgA (pIgA) was conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and injected into rats. The endosomes containing this ligand at 10 or 20 min after injection were isolated by the diaminobenzidine-induced density-shift procedure and their content in various marker enzymes was measured. The endosomes carrying pIgA-HRP 10 min after injection contained only traces of 5'-nucleotidase and low amounts of alkaline phosphodiesterase I. The estimated marker enzyme content is similar to that observed for the particles containing galactosylated bovine serum albumin conjugated to HRP, a ligand degraded in lysosomes. However, 20 min after injection, the transcytotic endosomes showed a marked enrichment in 5'-nucleotidase and especially in alkaline phosphodiesterase I. The results confirm the heterogeneity of rat liver endosomes and substantiate the concept of distinct endosomal compartments.
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PMID:Marker enzymes in rat liver vesicles involved in transcellular transport. 255 96

Exocrine acinar cells possess two cytochemically distinct populations of secondary lysosomes. One population is Golgi associated and has demonstrable acid phosphatase (AcPase) activity, whereas the second is basally located and lacks AcPase activity but has trimetaphosphatase (TMPase) activity. The basal lysosomes are tubular in shape and rapidly label with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) after intravenous injection. In the present study using isolated rat parotid acinar cells, the two lysosomal populations were separated by cell fractionation on Percoll density gradients and were analyzed biochemically and by EM cytochemistry. On 35% Percoll gradients, two peaks of AcPase and beta-hexosaminidase, both lysosomal marker enzymes, and succinic dehydrogenase, an enzyme marker for mitochondria, could be resolved. The major peaks of beta-hexosaminidase and succinic dehydrogenase and the minor peak of AcPase corresponded with the dense lysosome fraction. The major peak of AcPase and the minor peaks for beta-hexosaminidase and succinic dehydrogenase coincided with the light membrane fraction. Galactosyl transferase (a marker enzyme for Golgi saccules) and 5'-nucleotidase (a plasma membrane marker) were also associated with this fraction. By electron microscopy, the light membrane fraction was seen to contain tubular elements, multivesicular bodies (MVB), Golgi saccules, GERL, immature secretory granules, and some mitochondria. Electron microscopic cytochemical examination showed that these tubular structures were lysosomes. The dense lysosome fraction contained lysosomes positive for both AcPase and TMPase. After continuous incubation of isolated acinar cells with HRP, reaction product was rapidly localized to the light membrane fraction (greater than 2 min), where it was found in vesicles and tubular lysosomes. By 10 min it was present in MVB and tubular lysosomes, but by 60 min no HRP reaction product had appeared in the dense lysosomes. These results demonstrate that the tubular lysosomes are separable from dense lysosomes, typical secondary lysosomes, and are involved in the initial stages of endocytosis.
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PMID:Density gradient separation of two populations of lysosomes from rat parotid acinar cells. 255 1

We have quantified, in cultured rat fibroblasts, the association to the lysosomal membrane of two classical plasma membrane markers, 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I. To isolate highly purified lysosomal preparations, lysosomes were loaded with horseradish peroxidase (2-h cell uptake, 16-h chase) and isolated by isopycnic centrifugation in linear Percoll gradients, followed by a 3,3'-diaminobenzidine-induced density shift in sucrose gradients. Purified lysosomal preparations contained up to 50% of N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase of the homogenate. This lysosomal enzyme was enriched 33-fold in the most purified preparations. In the electron microscope, these preparations appeared to be highly purified and only contained organelles filled with diaminobenzidine reaction products. Analysis of purified preparations indicates that 0.5-0.8% of 5'-nucleotidase, but as much as 10.9-14.3% of alkaline phosphodiesterase I activities of the homogenate, are associated with lysosomes. After freezing-thawing, these activities remained essentially membrane-associated. The larger value obtained for alkaline phosphodiesterase I could not be ascribed to other lysosomal enzymes, as no such activity was detected at acidic pH. These two plasma membrane markers are thus unevenly distributed in the lysosomal compartment.
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PMID:Relations between plasma membrane and lysosomal membrane. 2. Quantitative evaluation of plasma membrane marker enzymes in the lysosomes. 282 61


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