Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.3.5 (
5'-nucleotidase
)
3,167
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies have indicated that rat luteal cells at certain stages of development can be fractionated so as to obtain two plasma membrane fractions with different densities and different profiles of marker enzymes. The light membrane fractions (density 1.13) contain the majority of hCG-binding sites and little or no cyclase enzyme, while the heavy membranes (density 1.17) contain the majority of cyclase enzyme and lesser quantities of hormone-binding sites. These membrane fractions were further compared with respect to their susceptibility to perturbation by digitonin. The buoyant density of luteal cell light membrane fractions, as marked by [125I]iodo-hCG binding, Mg2+-dependent ATPase, and
5'-nucleotidase
, were highly perturbable by digotonin (delta density, greater than 0.05), while
adenylate cyclase
activity and phosphodiesterase activity associated with this fraction were only slightly perturbed (delta density, less than 0.02). The buoyant density of luteal cell heavy membrane fractions, as marked by
adenylate cyclase
, ATPase, and nucleotidase, was not significantly perturbed by digotonin. The hCG binding associated with the heavy membrane fraction was not perturbed by digitonin. From these studies, we conclude that the
adenylate cyclase
activity associated with light membrane fractions is due to contamination by heavy membranes, while the hCG-binding activity in heavy membrane fractions is intrinsic to that membrane. Except for the lysosomal marker (glucuronidase), which was solubilized by digitonin, the detergent had no significant effect on the density of mitochondrial, Golgi, GERL (Golgi, endoplasmic reticulum, and lysomal), or endoplasmic reticulum membranes. Plasma membranes from isolated granulosa cells and ovaries obtained 24 h after priming with PMS gonadotropin-hCG behaved as heavy membranes (density, 1.17) which contained hCG-binding sites,
adenylate cyclase
, nucleotidase, and Mg2+-dependent ATPase. These were not significantly perturbed by digitonin. The appearance of light membranes and the segregation of
adenylate cyclase
from the majority of hCG-binding sites is a development feature of the luteal cell.
...
PMID:Interactions of gonadotropins with corpus luteum surface membranes. V. Differential effects of digitonin on the buoyant densities of light and heavy rat ovarian membrane fractions. 43 71
Plasma membranes from rat lung alveoli were isolated under hypotonic conditions (1 mM NaHCO3, 5 mM dithiothreitol, pH 7.5) using differential centrifugation and nonlinear sucrose gradient centrifugation techniques. Plasma membranes possessed densities of 1.13 and 1.16 g/cm3. The low density (1.13 g/cm3) fraction represented 2.2 and 2.0% of the total initial homogenate
5'-nucleotidase
,
EC 3.1.3.5
(a plasma membrane marker enzyme for rat lung, B.L. Riemer and C.C. Widnell, Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 171, 343-347, 1975) and
adenylate cyclase
,
EC 4.6.1.1
, respectively. The purification of
5'-nucleotidase
and
adenylate cyclase
in the low density fraction relative to their specific activities in the homogenate was 11.2 and 5.7, respectively. The cholesterol to phospholipid ratio of this fraction was 0.73. The electron microscopic study of this fraction revealed the presence of small vesicles exhibiting a typical unit membrane structure. Plasma membrane vesicles isolated by this procedure could provide a source of material to study this
adenylate cyclase
system.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of plasma membranes from rat lung alveoli. 44 Oct 47
Whole sheets of plasma membrane, each with their attached flagellum, were purified from Trypanosoma brucei. The method devised for their isolation included a new technique of cell breakage that used a combination of osmotic stress followed by mechanical sheer and avoided the problem of extreme vesiculation as well as the trapping of organelles in cell 'ghosts'. The purified membranes all contained the pellicular microtubular array. The antigenic surface coat was completely released from the plasma membrane during the isolation procedure. The membranes had a very high cholesterol/phospholipid ratio (1.54). A large proportion (42%) of the cellular DNA was recovered in the plasma-membrane fraction unless a step involving deoxyribonuclease treatment, which decreased the DNA content to less than 13%, was included before secrose-density gradient centrifugation. This step also aided the separation of plasma membranes from other cellular components. The ouabain-sensitive Na+ + K+-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase and
adenylate cyclase
co-purified with the plasma membranes. Although
5'-nucleotidase
was thought to be a plasma-membrane component, it was easily detached from the membrane. The purified membranes were essentially free of L-alanine-alpha-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, L-asparte-alpha-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, malate dehydrogenase, oligomycin-sensitive adenosine triphosphatase, glucose 6-phosphatase, Mg2+-stimulated p-nitrophenyl phosphatase and catalase.
...
PMID:The isolation and partial characterization of the plasma membrane from Trypanosoma brucei. 48 94
1. Arrhenius plots of the glucagon-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
,
5'-nucleotidase
, (Na+ + K+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase and Mg2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase activities of control hamster liver plasma membranes exhibited two break points at around 25 and 13 degrees C, whereas Arrhenius plots of their activities in hibernating hamster liver plasma membranes exhibited two break points at around 25 and 4 degrees C. 2. A single break occurring between 25 and 26 degrees C was observed in Arrhenius plots of the activities of fluoride-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
, basal
adenylate cyclase
and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of liver plasma membranes from both control and hibernating animals. 3. Arrhenius plots of phosphodiesterase I activity showed a single break at 13 degrees C for membranes from control animals, and a single break at around 4 degrees C for liver plasma membranes from hibernating animals. 4. The temperature at which break points occurred in Arrhenius plots of glucagon- and fluoride-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
activity were decreased by about 7--8 degrees C by addition of 40 mm-benzyl alcohol to the assays. 5. Discontinuities in the Arrhenius plots of 4-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonic acid fluorescence occurred at around 24 and 13 degrees C for liver plasma membranes from control animals, and at around 25 and 4 degrees C for membranes from hibernating animals. 6. We suggest that in hamster liver plasma membranes from control animals a lipid phase separation occurs at around 25 degrees C in the inner half of the bilayer and at around 13 degrees C in the outer half of the bilayer. On hibernation a change in bilayer asymmetry occurs, which is expressed by a decrease in the temperature at which the lipid phase separation occurs in the outer half of the bilayer to around 4 degrees C. The assumption made is that enzymes expressing both lipid phase separations penetrate both halves of the bilayer, whereas those experiencing a single break penetrate one half of the bilayer only.
...
PMID:Changes in the form of Arrhenius plots of the activity of glucagon-stimulated adenylate cyclase and other hamster liver plasma-membrane enzymes occurring on hibernation. 72 95
1. A rapid method for the isolation of hormonally sensitive rat fat-cell plasma membranes was developed by using immunological techniques. 2. Rabbit anti-(rat erythrocyte) sera were raised and shown to cross-react with isolated rat fat-cells. 3. Isolated rat fat-cells were coated with rabbit anti-(rat erythrocyte) antibodies, homogenized and the homogenate made to react with an immunoadsorbent prepared by covalently coupling donkey anti-(rabbit globulin) antibodies to aminocellulose. Uptake of plasma membrane on to the immunoadsorbent was monitored by assaying the enzymes
adenylate cyclase
and
5'-nucleotidase
and an immunological marker consisting of a 125I-labelled anti-(immunoglobulin G)-anti-cell antibody complex bound to the cells before fractionation. Contamination of the plasma-membrane preparation by other subcellular fractions was also investigated. 4. By using this technique, a method was developed allowing 25-40% recovery of plasma membrane from fat-cell homogenates within 30 min of homogenization. 5. Adenylate cyclase in the isolated plasma-membrane preparation was stimulated by 5 mum-adrenaline.
...
PMID:A rapid immunological procedure for the isolation of hormonally sensitive rat fat-cell plasma membrane. 77 77
Methods have been developed for the isolation on a semi-micro scale of a plasma membrane-enriched fraction from rat islets of Langerhans. An important feature of these experiments is the use of 125I-labeled wheat germ agglutinin as a specific probe for plasma membrane-containing fractions. The partly purified plasma membrane fraction had a density in sucrose of about 1.10 and was enriched in the activities of
5'-nucleotidase
, alkaline phosphatase, sodium-potassium, and magnesium-dependent ATPase and
adenylate cyclase
. It contained only very low levels of acid phosphatase, cytochrome c oxidase, insulin, and RNA. Further purification was hampered by the relatively small amounts of fresh plasma membrane material that could be obtained from 16-24 rats in each experiment. When islets were prelabeled with radioactive fucose, the plasma membrane-enriched fraction contained radioactivity at a four- to fivefold higher specific acivity than the whole islet homogenate. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of plasma membrane-enriched fractions pooled from several experiments revealed a distinctive pattern of protein bands as compared with other less pure fractions. With respect to rapidity, apparent specificity, and easy reversibility of the labeling of the plasma membrane fraction, 125I-wheat germ agglutinin provides a highly useful tool for the detection of microgram quantities of plasma membrane components which should be applicable to many other systems as well.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of plasma membrane-enriched fractions from rat pancreatic islets. 79 56
To examine the potential participation of the plasma membrane in differentiation, we studied the enzymatic activities of
5'-nucleotidase
and
adenylate cyclase
as a function of chondrocyte maturation. 16-day-old chick embryo tibiae epiphyses were dissected into proliferative, growing and hypertrophying zones. Partially purified membrane fractions prepared by differential centrifugation from the respective tissue segments were assayed for enzymatic activity. Cell suspensions from the same segments were examined cytochemically for the presence of
5'-nucleotidase
. The findings show that the
5'-nucleotidase
activity of the chick embryo epiphyseal cartilage has the following characteristics: (a) it has a Km of about 25 muM for 5'AMP, and is inhibited by a mixture of 2' and 3'AMP (apparent Ki about 10(-4) M) and by AOPCP; (b) it is predominantly localized at the cell surface but is also detected in the cytoplasm and in association with nuclear heterochromatin; and (c) it increases 10-fold (on a DNA basis) during the maturation of the epiphyseal cartilage cells. The
adenylate cyclase
activity has these characteristics: (a) it does not change during chondrocyte maturation (on a DNA basis); (b) its susceptibility to adenosine inhibition decreases at least 10-fold. The implication of these findings relative to a possible role of adenosine in cellular communication is discussed.
...
PMID:Membrane changes during cartilage maturation. Increase in 5'-nucleotidase and decrease in adenosine inhibition of adenylate cyclase. 83 6
Two subfractions of bovine thyroid plasma membranes, light membranes (L-membranes) and heavy membranes (H-membranes), were obtained by a discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation of plasma membranes. Electron microscopy of the plasma membrane and its subfractions showed that the H-membranes were very similar to the plasma membrane fraction, both contained junctional complexes, long membrane sheets, and vesicles. In contrast, the L-membranes consisted mainly of short membrane sheets and vesicles, and only a few junctional complexes. The H-membranes had greater
adenylate cyclase
activity which responded to thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) while this hormone had very little effect on the enzyme activity in the L-membranes. Despite the marked difference in TSH stimulation of
adenylate cyclase
activity in the H- and L-membrane fractions, specific binding of 125I-TSH was similar in both fractions. The L-membranes had higher specific activities of
5'-nucleotidase
and Mg2+ATPase while (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and alkaline phosphatase activities were similar in the two subfractions. Protein kinase activity of H-membranes was not significantly stimulated by exogenous cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP). Plasma membranes and H-membranes contained a substrate capable of being phosphorylated. Such phosphorylation was slightly increased by addition of soluble protein kinase. The phosphorylation of exogenous histone by protein kinase of plasma membranes and H-membranes was augmented by cAMP. In contrast, L-membranes had very little protein kinase activity even when exogenous histone was added. They were not a very good substrate for cytosolic protein kinase.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of subfractions of bovine thyroid plasma membranes. 85 12
1. Rat livers were dissociated into their constituent cells by perfusion through the portal vein with a medium containing collagenase, and hepatocytes separated from non-parenchymal cells. 2. It is shown that the procedure described by Wisher & Evans [(1975) Biochem. J. 146, 375-388] for preparation of plasma membranes from liver tissue when applied to isolated hepatocytes also yielded subfractions of similar morphology and marker-enzyme distribution. 3. Thus the distribution of alkaline phosphodiesterase,
5'-nucleotidase
and the basal and glucagon-stimulated
adenylate cyclase
among two 'light' vesicular and one 'heavy' junction-containing plasma-membrane subfractions paralleled that reported for tissue-derived plasma-membrane subfractions. 4. Increased recoveries and specific activities of plasma-membrane marker enzymes were obtained when soya-bean trypsin inhibitor was included in the collagenase-containing perfusion media used to dissociate the liver. 5. Polyacrylamide-gel-electrophoretic analysis of the corresponding plasma-membrane subfractions prepared from liver tissue and isolated hepatocytes were generally similar. 6. The results indicate that the functional polarity of the hepatocyte's plasma membrane is retained after tissue dissociation. The damage occurring to plasma-membrane ectoenzymes by the collagenase-perfusion procedure is discussed.
...
PMID:Preparation of plasma-membrane subfractions from isolated rat hepatocytes. 88 Feb 46
In this study we report that preincubation of Dictyostelium discoideum membrane-bound
adenylate cyclase
with ATP over the concentration range 0.5 to 100 mM results in a loss of catalytic activity and that this effect persists even after removal of ATP. An analysis of the time course of this effect shows that, at 25 mM ATP, a 5- to 10-min preincubation results in 50% loss of activity. Additional studies on this effect showed that anhydride bond cleavage of ATP occurs during the preincubation. However, loss of catalytic activity is not porduced by ADP, AMP, cAMP, adenosine, pyrophosphate, or phosphate either separately or in pairs. Further, using the structural analogs adenosine 5'-(alpha, beta-methylene)triphosphate and adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphonate, we show that there is a direct correlation between alpha-beta-phosphoanhydride bond cleavage and the loss of catalytic activity. These results can be interpreted in terms of two classes of reaction mechanisms: either those involving covalent modifications or those involving a ligand-induced slow conversion of the
adenylate cyclase
from an active to an inactive form. Additional studies show that the addition of AMP to the reaction mixture, as well as removal of the membrane-bound
5'-nucleotidase
activity, can prevent the loss of cyclase activity. These results suggest not only that
adenylate cyclase
activity is related to the AMP:ATP ratio but that the cyclase activity can be modified by the level of
5'-nucleotidase
activity. Studies on the duration of the loss of activity produced by ATP show that following removal of ATP and additional incubation, a gradual recovery of cyclase activity is observed. This result suggests that under appropriate conditions the cyclase inactivation by ATP is reversible.
...
PMID:Time-dependent changes in Dictyostelium discoideum adenylate cyclase activity upon incubation with ATP. 98 25
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>