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)

Treatment with neuraminidase decreased the activity of Na+,K+-activated Mg2+-adenosine triphosphatase in plasma membranes isolated from experimental granulation tissue but not that of 5'-nucleotidase or leucine-beta-naphthylamidase. A temporary lowering of the pH of the plasma membrane suspension to 2-3 inactivated all three enzymes, which remained inactive after the pH had been readjusted to 7.4. Addition of dextran preparations to the membrane suspension decreased the activity of adenosine triphosphatase. Ethanol (0.4%) had a similar effect. These marker enzymes of plasma membranes were not affected by additions of hyaluronate, chondroitin sulfate, protein polysaccharide or soluble collagen. Serotonin stimulated the adenosine triphosphatase activity slightly. About 10-20% of the protein in the plasma membrane preparation was extracted with EDTA. This "fuzzy coat" fraction yielded a distinct gel-electrophoretic protein pattern. Hyaluronidase was not helpful in cleaving this surface layer from the plasma membranes.
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PMID:Properties of plasma membranes from granulation tissue with reference to extracellular matrix. 0 56

We have perfused isolated rat livers with hypocalcemic (4.4 mg 100 ml) Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate albumin buffer. After 15 min of perfusion, a substance appeared in the perfusate which decreased rat renal adenylate cyclase activation by parathyroid hormone (PTH). The material in the perfusate was purified greater than 50,000-fold by Bio-Gel P-10 chromatography. The purified antagonist decreased the activation of rat renal cortical adenylate cyclase by PTH, glucagon, and epinephrine 75 to 100%. Concentration response curves for each of the hormones indicated a noncompetitive interaction of the inhibitor with the hormone. The inhibition was not species-specific, as the activation of the parathyroid hormone-responsive adenylate cyclase in cat renal cortex was also abolished by the inhibitor from the perfused rat liver. The inhibitor is a peptide, Mr equal to similar to 1000, which is heat-stable, acid-stable, alkai-labile, and is destroyed by trypsin, leucine aminopeptidase, and elastase. It is not destroyed by phosphodiesterase, 5'-nucleotidase, alkaline phosphatase, neuraminidase, RNase, or phospholipase A. The inhibitor is not produced by isolated rat livers perfused with normocalcemic perfusion media. It is unclear whether the peptide is synthesized by the liver or whether it is a breakdown product of a larger peptide or protein in the liver. This is the first reported peptide inhibitor of adenylate cyclase.
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PMID:Isolation of a unique peptide inhibitor of hormone-responsive adenylate cyclase. 16 24

A procedure was devised for the preparation of enriched populations of subcellular organelles from homogenized bovine spleen. The fractions obtained were characterized for arylsulfatase, succinate dehydrogenase, UDPgalactosyltransferase and 5'-nucleotidase activities. The distribution of sialidase (acylneuraminyl hydrolase, EC 3.2.1.18) activity directed towards either endogenous substrate or exogenous ganglioside substrate suggests that it is enriched in the plasma membrane/microsomal fractions. Sialidase activity towards exogenous sialoglycoproteins, isolated from erythrocyte membrane, was enriched in the least dense of the plasma membrane/microsomal-containing fractions. The endogenous sialidase substrates were primarily the sialoglycolipids, hematoside and disialogangliosides. At the pH optimum, 3.8, and 37 degrees C, release of endogenous sialic acid was linear with time for 3 h. At the end of this time, 85% or more of the available endogenous substrate was hydrolyzed.
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PMID:Distribution in spleen subcellular organelles of sialidase active towards natural sialogylcolipid and sialoglycoprotein substrates. 48 91

The interaction of glycoproteins of rough and smooth microsomal and Golgi membranes with Sepharose-bound lectins has been studied. One of these lectins was a crude preparation from wheat germ lipase which was found to bind primarily to N-acetyl neuraminic acid. Rough microsomes, smooth microsomes and Golgi membranes contain glycoproteins which bind to Concanavalin A (Con A specific for mannose residues) in decreasing amounts in the order indicated (rough, smooth and Golgi) and to wheat germ agglutinin (WGA, glucosamine-specific) and to the crude lipase preparation in increasing amounts in the order indicated. The small amount of binding of rough microsomes and Golgi membranes to Crotalaria (galactose-specific) increases substantially after neuraminidase treatment. Three submicrosomal particle preparations enriched either in AMPase or in NADH- or NADPH-oxidizing electron-transport enzymes contain glycoproteins which bind Con A and wheat germ agglutinin. The latter binding is sensitive to neuraminidase treatment. Two other submicrosomal particle preparations, both enriched in glucose-6-phosphatase activity, bind preferentially to WGA. This binding is, however, not sensitive to neuraminidase. Prolonged incubation with Ervilia lectin (mannose-specific) inhibits NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity, while the electron-transport chain involving cytochrome b5 is also inhibited by Crotalaria, indicating that both the flavoprotein and the cytochrome b5 are glycoproteins whose oligosaccharide chains have terminal mannose or galactose residues.
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PMID:Interaction of lectins with proteins of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi system of rat liver. 52 77

A rapid small-scale procedure was set up to obtain highly purified preparations of lysosomes and plasma membranes from the homogenate of cerebellar granule cells differentiated in culture. It consisted in a centrifugation of the postnuclear fraction P2, on a Percoll gradient with formation of an upper and lower band. The upper band, upon centrifugation on 1 M sucrose, produced a light band lying on the top, that constituted the plasma membrane preparation. The upper band constituted the lysosome preparation. The plasma membrane preparation exhibited a 6-fold relative specific activity increase of Na+, K(+)-ATPase and 5'-nucleotidase, with negligible contamination by other subcellular markers; the lysosomal preparation exhibited a 30-fold relative specific activity increase of beta-galactosidase and beta-hexosaminidase, with virtually no contamination by other subcellular markers. Both the lysosome and plasma membrane preparations carried sialidase activity on MUB-NeuNAc and ganglioside GD1a. The sialidase activity on GD1a required the presence of Triton X-100 in both subcellular preparations; the sialidase activity on MUB-NeuNAc was markedly activated by albumin only in the lysosomes. The lysosomal sialidase had a unique optimal pH value, 3.9. The plasma membrane sialidase featured two values of optimal pH, one at 3.9, for both substrates and second at 5.4 and 6.0 for MUB-NeuNAc and GD1a, respectively. It is concluded that cerebellar granule cells differentiated in vitro possess one lysosomal sialidase and two plasma membrane sialidases, all of them active on ganglioside.
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PMID:Dual subcellular localization of sialidase in cultured granule cells differentiated in culture. 130 62

A procedure is proposed for the separation of multiple forms of 5'-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5) by cellulose acetate electrophoresis. The effects of various treatments (wheat-germ lectin, neuraminidase, n-butanol, papain, Triton X-100 and precipitation of LDL and VLDL) on the electrophoretic pattern of 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphatase were studied. In healthy controls, the presence of three fractions with alpha 1, alpha 2 and beta mobilities was observed, the latter being the major one. In different hepatobiliary diseases a close relationship between the presence of high molecular weight alkaline phosphatase and the increase in the ratio Total/beta 5'-nucleotidase was observed, showing that the increase in total 5'-nucleotidase in these patients is mainly due to the alpha 1 isoform. The nature of these forms is discussed.
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PMID:Electrophoretic separation of 5'-nucleotidase multiple forms. 204 89

The total pellet from pig forebrain (from which the cytosolic sialidase was completely washed out) was treated with phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C (PIPLC) and centrifuged at high speed. The supernatant contained sialidase and 5'-nucleotidase activities. The greatest liberation of sialidase was obtained after incubation for 20 min with PIPLC at 37 degrees C using pH 6.0 and a ratio between PIPLC (as units) and protein of 1.6. Under these conditions, the release of sialidase, 5'-nucleotidase, and protein was 22, 50, and 18.5%, respectively. On treatment with PIPLC, a purified preparation of pig brain neuronal (synaptosomal) membranes released 28% of its sialidase whereas a purified preparation of pig brain lysosomes did not liberate any sialidase activity. The pH optimum of sialidase present in the supernatant obtained after PIPLC treatment of the total pellet was 4.2, the same as that of the enzyme embedded in the membrane. When this supernatant was subjected to ammonium sulfate fractionation, 88% of its sialidase, having a pH optimum of 4.2, was recovered in the fraction precipitated between 20 and 45% of salt saturation and subsequently dialyzed. Ammonium sulfate treatment caused the appearance of a second sialidase activity, having a pH optimum of 6.6 and behaving on fractionation similarly to the pH 4.2 sialidase. The Km and Vmax values of pH 4.2 and pH 6.6 sialidase were similar (1.48 x 10(-4) and 0.98 x 10(-4) M for Km and 1.6 and 1.4 mU/mg of protein for Vmax, respectively), whereas the stability on standing at 4 degrees C or exposure to freezing and thawing cycles was greater for pH 4.2 sialidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Solubilization of the membrane-bound sialidase from pig brain by treatment with bacterial phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C. 221 10

5'-Nucleotidase was found in purified rat liver tritosomes. When tritosomes were subfractionated into the membrane and soluble contents fractions, 73% of the total 5'-nucleotidase activity was found in the membrane fraction and 24% in the soluble contents fraction. Immunoblotting using specific polyclonal antibodies against the rat liver plasma membrane 5'-nucleotidase showed that the mobilities on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of both 5'-nucleotidases in the membrane and contents fractions were identical to that of the enzyme in the plasma membranes (Mr = 72,000). 5'-Nucleotidases in the membrane and contents fractions were sensitive to neuraminidase and converted into a form that was 4 kDa smaller after digestion, as observed in the case of plasma membrane enzyme. 5'-Nucleotidases, both from the membrane and contents fractions, were purified using immunoaffinity chromatography, and the isoelectric points, heat stability, and oligomeric structure of the purified enzymes were compared. Isoelectric focusing and the heat stability test indicated the resemblance of the soluble enzyme to the membrane-bound enzyme. However, the membrane-bound enzyme aggregated in the absence of Triton X-100, whereas the soluble enzyme behaved as a dimer. The topography of 5'-nucleotidase in the tritosomal membranes was studied using antibodies against 5'-nucleotidase and neuraminidase treatment. The inhibition of 5'-nucleotidase were not observed in the intact tritosomal fraction until the tritosomes had been disrupted by osmotic shock. These results show that the active sites and the oligosaccharide chains of 5'-nucleotidase are located on the inside surface of the tritosomal membranes.
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PMID:5'-Nucleotidase in rat liver lysosomes. 282 Sep 49

A prerequisite for the purification of any protein to homogeneity is that the protein is not non-specifically associated with other proteins especially during the final stage(s) of the fractionation procedure. This requirement is not so often fulfilled when nonionic detergents (for instance Triton X-100) are used for solubilization of membrane proteins. The reason is that these detergents are not efficient enough to prevent the protein of interest from forming aggregates with other proteins upon contact with chromatographic or electrophoretic supporting media, which, due to their polymeric nature, have a tendency to induce aggregation of other polymers, for instance, hydrophobic proteins. The aggregation can be avoided if sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) is employed as detergent. We therefore suggest that membrane proteins should be purified by conventional methods in the presence of SDS and that the purified proteins, which are in a denatured state, are allowed to renature. There is good change to renature internal membrane proteins since they should not be so susceptible to denaturation by detergents as are water-soluble proteins because the natural milieu of the former proteins is lipids which in fact are detergents. In this paper we present a renaturation method based on the removal of SDS by addition of a large excess of G 3707, a nonionic detergent. By this technique we have renatured a 5'-nucleotidase from Acholeplasma laidlawii and a neuraminidase from influenza virus. The enzyme activities were higher (up to 6-fold) after the removal of SDS than prior to the addition of SDS.
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PMID:Purification of membrane proteins in SDS and subsequent renaturation. 283 10

Intracellular movement of cell surface 5'-nucleotidase was studied in H4S cells, a rat hepatoma cell line. Surface labelled cells were incubated for various periods at 37 degrees C and treated with neuraminidase at 0 degrees C. Removal of sialic acid residues from glycoproteins results in a change of their isoelectric points. Analysis with isoelectric focusing was then used to distinguish between cell surface and intracellular 5'-nucleotidase. Incubation of 125I-surface-labelled cells at 37 degrees C resulted in a gradual decrease of labelled 5'-nucleotidase at the plasma membrane until, at 60 to 90 min, a steady state was reached with 52% of the label on the cell surface and 48% intracellular. Pretreatment of the cells with the weak base primaquine had no influence on this distribution while at the same time uptake of iron via the transferrin receptor was inhibited. Using immunoelectron microscopy 5'-nucleotidase was found on the cell surface, in multivesicular endosomes and the Golgi complex. Preincubation of the cells in the presence of cycloheximide caused a reduction of labelling in the Golgi complex, whereas the label in the other compartments was retained. These results lead to the conclusion that 5'-nucleotidase does not recycle through the Golgi complex and that in contrast to the transferrin receptor the recycling of 5'-nucleotidase is not inhibited by primaquine.
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PMID:Recycling of 5'-nucleotidase in a rat hepatoma cell line. 285 Jan 62


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