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)

AMP-degrading pathways in Azotobacter vinelandii cells were investigated. AMP nucleosidase (EC 3.2.2.4) was rapidly synthesized and reached a maximum at 24 h, while the activity of 5'-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5) specific for AMP, which was negligible during the logarithmic phase of the growth, first appeared in 24 h-cultures, and reached a maximum after complete exhaustion of sucrose from the growth medium (70 h). Cell-free extracts of A. vinelandii of 48 h-cultures hydrolyzed AMP to ribose 5-phosphate and adenine in the presence of ATP, and adenine was deaminated to hypoxanthine. When ATP was excluded, AMP was dephosphorylated to adenosine, which was further metabolized to inosine, and finally to hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine thus formed was reutilized for the salvage synthesis of IMP under the conditions where 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate was able to be supplied. These results suggest that the levels of ATP can determine the rate of AMP degradation by the AMP nucleosidase- and 5-'nucleotidase-pathways. The role of ATP in the AMP degradation was discussed in relation to the regulatory properties of AMP nucleosidase, inosine nucleosidase (EC. 3.2.2.2) and adenosine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.4).
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PMID:Adenine nucleotide metabolism in Azotobacter vinelandii. Two metabolic pathways of AMP degradation. 626 50

A 5'-nucleotidase (5'-ribonucleotide phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.5) was highly purified from rat liver. The preparation appeared homogeneous on the criteria of disc-gel electrophoresis. A pH optimum at about 6.5 was observed for all substrates tested. The activity of this enzyme was absolutely dependent on the presence of various bivalent metal salts. The highest V value was attained with MgCl2 and the concentration at half-enzyme saturation was lowest with MnCl2. The enzyme had markedly higher affinities for IMP, dIMP, GMP and dGMP than the other 5'-mononucleotides, although V values for all the substrates tested were in the same order of magnitude. The activity of this enzyme was stimulated by various alkali metal salts, some carboxylic acids and adenine nucleotides. When AMP was used as substrate, the substrate-velocity plot was sigmoidal and NaCl, Tris-maleate and ATP stimulated the enzyme by decreasing the sigmoidicity of the plot. When IMP was used as substrate, the substrate-velocity plot was hyperbolic and these three activators stimulated the enzyme by increasing the V and decreasing the Km value. Some of these results provided consistent evidence for the identity of this enzyme and the cytosol 5'-nucleotidase, the presence of which had been reported in crude preparations from rat liver.
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PMID:Purification and some properties of cytosol 5'-nucleotidase from rat liver. 626 Feb 3

In the physiological range of the adenylate energy charge in liver (0.7-0.9), th rate of AMP-hydrolysis catalysed by rat liver cytosol 5'-nucleotidase (5'-ribonucleotide phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.5) increased sharply with decreasing energy charge. In addition, a decrease in the concentration of Pi caused marked acceleration of the AMP-hydrolysing activity over the physiological range of adenylate energy charge. These responses seem to serve to protect the cells against a metabolic stress which could result from sudden utilization of ATP by removal of AMP. The AMP-hydrolysing activity of this enzyme decreased sharply as the size of the adenine nucleotide pool decreased in the physiological range. This effect may be a self-limiting response to prevent excess depletion of the pool. IMP-hydrolysing activity of this enzyme increased with increasing adenylate energy charge. But no marked response to its variation within the physiological range was observed. On the basis of the data obtained in this study, the IMP-hydrolysing activity of the cytosol 5'-nucleotidase in rat liver cells seems to be comparable to that of AMP deaminase reaction, but the AMP-hydrolysing activity was estimated to be less than 10% of AMP deaminase reaction at energy charge value of about 0.7. This strongly suggests that the AMP leads to IMP leads to inosine pathway is more significant that the AMP leads to adenosine leads to inosine pathway in rat liver.
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PMID:Regulation of cytosol 5'-nucleotidase by adenylate energy charge. 626 62

A previously unknown 5'nucleotidase (5'-ribonucleotide phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.5) (5'-Nase) specific for orotidine 5'-monophosphate (OMP) hs been discovered. This enzyme orotidine 5'-monophosphate phosphohydrolase (OMPase), was isolated from mouse liver microsomes as a separate entity from the nonspecific 5'-Nase. OMPase was partially purified and is shown to cleave OMP to orotidine and inorganic phosphate. The enzyme has negligible activity towards UMP, CMP, dTMP, AMP, IMP, GMP, XMP, 6-azauridine 5'-monophosphate, 1-beta-D-ribofuranosylbarbituric acid 5'-monophosphate (BMF), 2'-UMP, 3'-UMP, 2'-AMP, 3'-AMP, ribose 5-phosphate and beta-glycerophosphate, all of which--with the exception of the 2' or 3' monophosphates, ribose 5'-phosphate, and beta-glycerophosphate--are substrates for 5'-Nase. Both enzymes are inhibited by NaF, but only OMPase is inhibited by SF reagents. OMPase is not inhibited by orotidine, orotate, BMP, concanavalin A, or tetramisole (an alkaline phosphatase inhibitor). OMPase had a Mr 53,000, Km value of 1 mM for OMP, and Vmax value of 49 nmol/min . mg of protein at the present stage of purification. OMPase activity has also been detected in various mammalian tissues including normal human tissues, human tumor xenografts, lymphocytes, and rat liver. OMPase may be responsible, in part, for the low levels of intracellular "free" OMP and for orotidine accumulation in cells treated with 6-azauridine and patients suffering from aortic aciduria.
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PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of a 5'-nucleotidase specific for orotidine-5'-monophosphate. 628 Jan 63

The 5'-nucleotidase located in the cytoplasmic fraction of bovine brain cortex was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The molecular weight was 134,000 daltons in the presence of sodium deoxycholate, whereas the enzyme formed high molecular weight aggregates in the absence of detergent. The purified enzyme showed the same kinetic and electrophoretic behaviour as the enzyme present in the original cytoplasmic fraction, and the presence of surfactants did not change the Km and Vm values. The nucleotidase from this source was a phosphohydrolase of 5'-mononucleotides acting on the deoxyribonucleotides and ribonucleotides of purines and pyrimidines. 5'-IMP was the preferred substrate; the optimum pH was 7.5. The study of the influence of the temperature on the initial reaction rates allowed calculation of the delta Ea and delta H degrees values. The variation of Vm and Km with a change in pH suggests the existence of a sulfhydryl group and an imidazole group in the enzyme-substrate complex.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of bovine brain 5'-nucleotidase. 628 65

The inhibition of the cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5) by its product, inosine, was studied with a partially purified preparation of the enzyme from rat liver. Inhibition of Pi production was found to be due to exchange of the inosine moiety between inosine and IMP. Exchange was not catalysed by reversal of the hydrolytic reaction, suggesting, instead, the mediation of an enzyme-phosphate intermediate. Two models for the catalytic mechanism are proposed and rate equations for the dependence of Pi production on inosine concentration are derived. The experimentally determined dependence was consistent with a mechanism in which hydrolysis of the enzyme-phosphate intermediate occurred only when it was unoccupied by inosine. This conclusion suggests that inosine analogues that cannot participate in exchange should inhibit the enzyme. Such inhibitors might be useful in defining the enzyme's physiological role or as pharmacological agents to decrease breakdown of purine nucleotides. The possibility that nucleoside exchange provides an alternative route for the phosphorylation of mutagenic or cytotoxic nucleoside analogues should also be considered.
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PMID:Nucleoside exchange catalysed by the cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase. 629 57

The interaction of 5'-deoxy-5'-thioadenosine 5'-monophosphate (A(S)MP) and 5'-deoxy-5'-thioinosine 5'-monophosphate (I(S)MP) with snake venom, 5'nucleotidase, and calf intestinal mucosa alkaline phosphatase has been characterized. The substrates, A(S)MP and I(S)MP, are analogs of adenosine 5'-monophosphate and inosine 5'-monophosphate in which sulfur replaces oxygen as the bridge between the 5'-carbon of the ribose and the phosphorous. The P-S bond of both A(S)MP and I(S)MP was hydrolyzed by alkaline phosphatase producing the corresponding thionucleoside as a reaction product. The Km for A(S)MP was 270 microM and the V for alkaline phosphatase was 110 nmol/min/mg (8% of the V for AMP), whereas the corresponding values for I(S)MP were 300 microM and 530 nmol/min/mg protein, respectively. In contrast, 5'-nucleotidase did not catalyze hydrolysis of either A(S)MP or I(S)MP. A(S)MP and I(S)MP were competitive inhibitors of the 5'-nucleotidase hydrolysis of AMP and IMP, respectively, with Ki values of 975 and 13 microM. Decreasing the pH of the reaction from 8.1 to 7.1 lowered the Ki for I(S)MP by 100-fold, to a value of 0.15 microM.
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PMID:5'-deoxy-5'-thioanalogs of adenosine and inosine 5'-monophosphate: studies with 5'-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphatase. 629

Primary rat cardiomyocyte cultures were utilized as a model for the study of purine nucleotide metabolism in the heart muscle, especially in connection with the mechanisms operating for the conservation of adenine nucleotides. The cultures exhibited capacity to produce purine nucleotides from nonpurine molecules (de novo synthesis), as well as from preformed purines (salvage synthesis). The conversion of adenosine to AMP, catalyzed by adenosine kinase, appears to be the most important physiological salvage pathway of adenine nucleotide synthesis in the cardiomyocytes. The study of the metabolic fate of IMP formed from [14C]formate or [14C]hypoxanthine and that of AMP formed from [14C]adenine or [14C]adenosine revealed that in the cardiomyocyte the main flow in the nucleotide interconversion pathways is from IMP to AMP, whereas the flux from AMP to IMP appeared to be markedly slower. Following synthesis from labeled precursors by either de novo or salvage pathways, most of the radioactivity in purine nucleotides accumulated in adenine nucleotides, and only a small proportion of it resided in IMP. The results suggest that the main pathway of AMP degradation in the cardiomyocyte proceeds through adenosine rather than through IMP. About 90% of the total radioactivity in purines effluxed from the cells during de novo synthesis from [14C]formate or following prelabeling of adenine nucleotides with [14C]adenine were found to reside in hypoxanthine. The activities in cell extracts of AMP 5'-nucleotidase and IMP 5'-nucleotidase, which catalyze nucleotide degradation, and of AMP deaminase, a key enzyme in the purine nucleotide cycle, were low. The nucleotidase activity resembles, and that of the AMP deaminase contrasts the respective enzyme activities in extracts of cultured skeletal-muscle myotubes. The results indicate that in the cardiomyocyte, in contrast to the myotube, the main mechanism operating for conservation of nucleotides is prompt phosphorylation of AMP, rather than operation of the purine nucleotide cycle. The primary cardiomyocyte cultures are a plausible model for the study of purine nucleotide metabolism in the heart muscle.
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PMID:Characterization of purine nucleotide metabolism in primary rat cardiomyocyte cultures. 632 48

Adenosine kinase, adenosine deaminase, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, inosine-nucleoside phosphorylase, 5'-AMP deaminase and 5'-IMP nucleotidase were identified in cell-free extracts of duckling erythrocytes; no evidence for 5'-AMP nucleotidase and xanthine oxidase activity was found. The Km values for the duckling red cell enzymes were similar to those reported for human erythrocytes. Plasmodium lophurae extracts demonstrated similar enzyme activities except for 5'-AMP deaminase and 5'-IMP nucleotidase which were absent. It is proposed that during infection erythrocytic AMP is catabolized to IMP, inosine and hypoxanthine; the hypoxanthine is taken up by the plasmodium, utilized to form IMP, and this in turn is converted into adenine and guanine nucleotides.
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PMID:Purine metabolizing enzymes of Plasmodium lophurae and its host cell, the duckling (Anas domesticus) erythrocyte. 678 22

1. The breakdown of the adenine nucleotide pool provoked by the replacement of the O(2)/CO(2) gas phase by N(2)/CO(2) was studied in isolated rat hepatocytes with the purpose of defining the pathway of the catabolism of AMP in anoxic conditions. 2. Approx. 40% of the adenine nucleotide pool was lost after 40-60 min of anoxia. In hepatocytes from fed rats there was a slow disappearance of ATP. This is explained by the presence of glycogen stores, allowing the generation of ATP by anaerobic glycolysis. In hepatocytes from 24h-starved rats, ATP almost completely disappeared within 5 min, and was partly replaced by an accumulation of AMP. This indicates that another mechanism protects the adenine nucleotide pool in the starved state. In both conditions, the loss of adenine nucleotides was mainly accounted for by an accumulation of uric acid, owing to the oxygen-dependence of urate oxidase. 3. Incubation of the hepatocytes before the suppression of O(2) with coformycin at concentrations known to inhibit selectively adenosine deaminase did not result in an accumulation of adenosine and did not influence the formation of uric acid. This indicates that the degradation of AMP does not proceed by way of 5'-nucleotidase under these conditions. In the presence of coformycin at concentrations which are inhibitory to AMP deaminase, however, the formation of uric acid was nearly suppressed, demonstrating that the initial degradation of AMP was catalysed by the latter enzyme. 4. The accumulation of AMP in the starved state can be explained by the pronounced decrease in ATP, the major stimulator of AMP deaminase, and the enhanced increase in P(i), one of its physiological inhibitors. The modifications of these effectors can also explain the increased inhibition of the cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase, shown by the accumulation of IMP in the absence of coformycin, in hepatocytes from starved rats. 5. Reoxygenation of the hepatocytes after 20 min of anoxia induced a prompt regeneration of ATP, which reached concentrations equal to the pre-existing concentration of AMP. 6. No explanation was found for the accumulation of IMP observed after preincubation of the hepatocytes with 0.1mum-coformycin, since the activities of the IMP-metabolizing enzymes were not influenced by this inosine analogue.
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PMID:The pathway of adenine nucleotide catabolism and its control in isolated rat hepatocytes subjected to anoxia. 708 1


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