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)

We have studied the effects of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA, 15 micrograms) on pulmonary endothelial ectoenzyme [angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and 5'-nucleotidase (NCT)] function in isolated rabbit lungs perfused in situ with platelet-poor (PPP) or platelet-rich (PRP) plasma in the presence or absence of neutrophils. Enzyme activities were estimated from the hydrolysis of the substrates [3H]benzoyl-Phe-Ala-Pro ([3H]BPAP) by ACE and 14C-labeled AMP by NCT during a single transpulmonary passage, using indicator-dilution techniques. In all treatment groups PMA produced a delayed increase in pulmonary vascular resistance to about three times the control value. PMA alone [in lungs perfused with PPP (n = 5 animals) or PRP (n = 6)] or neutrophils alone (in PPP-perfused lungs, n = 5) had no effect on enzyme activity. However, PMA-activated neutrophils (n = 5) decreased percent metabolism (%M) of [3H]BPAP from 87 +/- 3 to 77 +/- 4% (30 min after PMA), and the apparent first-order parameter [ratio of maximum activity to Michaelis constant (Amax/Km)] for ACE from 821 +/- 114 to 613 +/- 61 ml/min (30 min after PMA). At the same time, Km values of BPAP for ACE and AMP for NCT were elevated from 9.2 +/- 2.2 to 19.3 +/- 3 microM and 6.7 +/- 1.2 to 15.1 +/- 3.6 microM, respectively, whereas Amax (product of enzyme mass and rate of product formation, thus an index of perfused microvascular surface area) did not change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:PMA-activated neutrophils decrease pulmonary endothelial ectoenzyme activities in perfused rabbit lungs. 133 99

Functional studies were performed on human peripheral blood T lymphocytes stained with goat anti-5'-nucleotidase antibodies and separated into ecto-5'-nucleotidase (ecto-5'-NT)-positive and -negative populations using the FACSTAR fluorescence-activated cell sorter. On the average, ecto-5'-NT+ T cells contained 34 +/- 13% CD4+ and 55 +/- 15% CD8+ cells, whereas ecto-5'-NT-T cells contained 65 +/- 12% CD4+ and 23 +/- 8% CD8+ cells. Staining with anti-5'-NT antibodies did not significantly alter the ability of unseparated T cells to proliferate in response to PHA or PMA, or in a MLR. However, prior incubation with anti-5'-NT antibodies did inhibit the ability of irradiated T cells to provide help for PWM-stimulated Ig synthesis by as much as 55%. In five separate experiments, ecto-5'-NT-T cells demonstrated an equal or better ability to incorporate [3H]TdR after PHA stimulation or in a MLR, as compared with ecto-5'-NT+ T cells. Similarly, ecto-5'-NT- T cells were not diminished in their ability to provide help for autologous B cells in a PWM-driven system. Clearly, the inability of ecto-5'-NT- T cells from patients with a variety of immunodeficiency diseases to function in these assays cannot be explained solely by their lack of ecto-5'-NT activity. In contrast, ecto-5'-NT-positive and -negative T cells showed markedly different dose-response curves for proliferation in response to PMA. Ecto-5'-NT+ T cells responded to lower doses of PMA (1.0 ng/ml) than did ecto-5'-NT- T cells and showed a two- to eight-fold greater rate of [3H]TdR incorporation at 3 to 10 ng of PMA per ml. Ecto-5'-NT+ T cells may have a protein kinase C that is more accessible or more easily activated or may utilize an alternate pathway of activation when stimulated with low concentrations of PMA.
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PMID:Functional characterization of ecto-5'-nucleotidase-positive and -negative human T lymphocytes. 253 56

Human peripheral blood T cells were stimulated to proliferate when cultured with submitogenic doses of PMA and goat antibodies to 5'-nucleotidase (5'-NT). The degree of proliferation, as measured by [3H]TdR incorporation on day 3, was similar to that achieved by stimulation with PHA. Anti-5'-NT antibodies had no effect on PHA-induced proliferation. Maximal stimulation was achieved with 0.6 to 1.0 ng/ml of PMA and 125 micrograms/ml of IgG isolated from a goat anti-5'-NT antiserum. Both intact IgG and F(ab')2 fragments were stimulatory. IL-2R expression and IL-2 secretion were also induced by anti-5'-NT antibodies and PMA. Anti-5'-NT-induced proliferation was inhibited greater than 95% by a murine anti-IL-2 receptor mAb and required less than 0.3% monocytes. Similar results have been obtained with a murine mAb specific for 5'-NT. As expected, anti-5'-NT antibodies and PMA did not induce the proliferation of ecto-5'-NT-T cells isolated by cell sorting. Pretreatment of total T cells with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C removed an average of 89% of the 5'-NT activity from the cell surface and also inhibited by 83% the ability of the cells to proliferate in response to anti-5'-NT antibodies and PMA. Thus, the activation signal provided by anti-5'-NT antibodies is apparently transduced, in large part, by a form of the enzyme that is attached to the membrane via glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol linkage. These data suggest that 5'-NT may play a role in lymphocyte activation as has been proposed for other glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored lymphocyte surface proteins.
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PMID:Antibodies to 5'-nucleotidase (CD73), a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored protein, cause human peripheral blood T cells to proliferate. 255 May 43

We investigated changes in angiotensin converting-enzyme (ACE) activity before and at 5, 15, 60, and 240 min after 20 micrograms phorbol myristate acetate/kg body wt iv in conscious rabbits. ACE activity was estimated in vivo from the single-pass transpulmonary metabolism of the synthetic substrate [3H]benzoyl-Phe-Ala-Pro [( 3H]BPAP) under first-order reaction conditions. Within 5 min after PMA administration, all animals developed profound granulocytopenia (15% of control) and moderate thrombocytopenia (57% of control), both lasting for the duration of the experiment. Concomitantly, there was a significant decrease in the transpulmonary metabolism of [3H]BPAP and the calculated apparent first-order reaction constant Amax/Km of ACE for [3H]BPAP. No histological evidence of lung injury was observed at these times. Since a concomitant fall in the permeability surface area product for urea was also observed, we considered that the apparent decline in ACE activity might have resulted from a reduction in perfused endothelial surface area. To resolve this, we studied the effect of PMA on the Km (a measure of enzyme affinity for its substrate) and Amax (a derivative of Vmax that is dependent upon total enzyme present and thus capillary surface area) of ACE and 5'-nucleotidase for [3H]BPAP and [14C]AMP, respectively. A significant increase in Km for both enzymes was observed at 1 h after PMA, whereas Amax was unaffected, suggesting that low-dose PMA may indeed produce endothelial cell enzyme dysfunction independent of its effect on capillary surface area. These results provide evidence of pulmonary capillary functional injury before or in the absence of structural endothelial damage.
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PMID:Early pulmonary endothelial enzyme dysfunction after phorbol ester in conscious rabbits. 369 30

The subcellular distribution of the NADPH oxidase of guinea-pig peritoneal-elicited macrophages was investigated. Post-nuclear supernatants obtained from PMA-stimulated macrophages were fractionated in discontinuous sucrose gradients. The NADPH oxidase was found to be enriched at the interface between 20 and 34 per cent sucrose. This interface was also enriched in 5'-nucleotidase, a plasma membrane marker and in glucose-6-phosphatase and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, two endoplasmic reticulum markers. The distribution in the gradient of beta-glucuronidase, a marker of lysosomes and of succinate dehydrogenase, a marker of mitochondria was clearly different from that of NADPH oxidase and of the markers of plasma membrane and of endoplasmic reticulum. These results indicated that in stimulated-elicited macrophages the NADPH oxidase is associated with a membrane fraction. With the fractionation technique employed it was not possible to clarify whether the oxidase is located in the plasma membrane or in the endoplasmic reticulum. In order to clarify this matter the isolation of phagosomes was performed. NADPH oxidase was found to be enriched in the phagosomal fraction. Phagosomes were also found to be enriched in the plasma membrane marker 5'-nucleotidase. Glucose-6-phosphatase,, a marker of endoplasmic reticulum, and beta-glucuronidase, a marker of lysosomes were not enriched in the phagosomal fraction. The results obtained clearly suggest that the activated NADPH oxidase of peritoneal elicited macrophages of guinea pig is located in the plasma membrane.
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PMID:Plasma membrane and phagosome localisation of the activated NADPH oxidase in elicited peritoneal macrophages of the guinea-pig. 706 27

The human leukocyte surface Ag CD38 was recently identified as a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)(+)-glycohydrolase ecto-enzyme, degrading NAD into nicotinamide and ADP-ribose. We show here that expression of CD38 is increased in the Jurkat T cell line after treatment with agents that augment intracellular cAMP, with the permeant cAMP analogue dibutyryl-cAMP (db-cAMP), and also with PMA, which activates protein kinase C. Treatment of human PBL T cells with db-cAMP or submitogenic doses of PMA also increased CD38 expression. Two other nucleotide-hydrolyzing activities were induced on the T cell surface concomitantly with CD38: the human PC-1 molecule, a nucleotide phosphodiesterase/pyrophosphatase that produces AMP from NAD or ADP-ribose, and a nucleotidase that produces adenosine from AMP, but which may be distinct from the CD73 5'-nucleotidase. All three enzymes were up-regulated after stimulation of human peripheral blood T cells with PHA. The coordinated regulation of these ecto-enzymes suggested that, besides a possible signaling function, they may recycle extracellular NAD by degrading it to adenosine and nicotinamide, which can be taken up by cells. In support of this hypothesis, db-cAMP-treated Jurkat cells could degrade extracellular NAD for de novo synthesis of purines, while untreated cells could not. Activated lymphocytes are often located in tissues in which cell death is common. It is suggested that the coordinated expression of these enzymes may allow activated T cells to re-use NAD and nucleotides from dead cells.
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PMID:Coordinated regulation in human T cells of nucleotide-hydrolyzing ecto-enzymatic activities, including CD38 and PC-1. Possible role in the recycling of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide metabolites. 875 17

Adenosine has potent immunosuppressive activity. Since the source of adenosine and the mechanism of its release in the immune system is largely unknown and may vary according to cell type, we have evaluated the relationship between adenosine metabolism and the enzymatic activities and mRNA levels of adenosine-metabolizing enzymes in myeloid and lymphoid cell lines. Induction of HL-60 cell differentiation along the macrophage lineage by PMA resulted in a reduction in the activities of adenosine deaminase (ADA), adenosine kinase (AK), and inosine monophosphate-specific cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase and an elevation of ecto-5'-nucleotidase (ecto-5'-NT). These changes were accompanied by an elevation of ecto-5'-NT mRNA and a decrease in ADA and AK mRNAs in a time-dependent fashion. Comparison of AK and ADA mRNA levels in several other leukemic cell lines revealed generally similar responses to PMA with much stronger suppression in immature T cells than in B cells. The metabolism of adenosine either through phosphorylation (AK) or deamination (ADA) was reduced in PMA-stimulated cells. Furthermore, the cumulative changes in enzyme expression resulted in a 2.5-fold increase in intracellular adenosine formation in PMA-stimulated cells. The inhibition of AK by 5'-iodotubercidin further increased adenosine formation by 6-fold over that in untreated cells. In accord with the increase in ecto-5'-NT activity, extracellular AMP dephosphorylation increased dramatically, but there was no increase in extracellular ATP degradation. These results indicate that a coordinated shift in adenosine-metabolizing enzyme levels during PMA-induced HL-60 cell differentiation is accompanied by a decrease in adenosine uptake and an increase in adenosine release.
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PMID:Adenosine metabolism during phorbol myristate acetate-mediated induction of HL-60 cell differentiation: changes in expression pattern of adenosine kinase, adenosine deaminase, and 5'-nucleotidase. 914 13

CD73 (ecto-5'-nucleotidase; EC 3.1.3.5) participates in lymphocyte binding to endothelial cells and converts extracellular AMP into a potent anti-inflammatory substance adenosine. However, the regulation of expression and function of CD73 has remained largely unknown. In this study, we show that IFN-alpha produces a time- and dose-dependent long-term up-regulation of CD73 on endothelial cells, but not on lymphocytes both at protein and RNA levels. Moreover, CD73-mediated production of adenosine is increased after IFN-alpha treatment on endothelial cells, resulting in a decrease in the permeability of these cells. Subsequent to induction with PMA, FMLP, dibutyryl cAMP, thrombin, histamine, IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and LPS, no marked changes in the level of CD73 expression on endothelial cells are observed. We also show that CD73 is up-regulated in vivo on the vasculature after intravesical treatment of urinary bladder cancers with IFN-alpha. In conclusion, distinct behavior of lymphocyte and endothelial CD73 subsequent to cytokine treatment further emphasizes the existence of cell type-specific mechanisms in the regulation of CD73 expression and function. Overall, these results suggest that IFN-alpha is a relevant in vivo regulator of CD73 in the endothelial-leukocyte microenvironment in infections/inflammations, and thus has a fundamental role in controlling the extent of inflammation via CD73-dependent adenosine production.
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PMID:IFN-alpha induced adenosine production on the endothelium: a mechanism mediated by CD73 (ecto-5'-nucleotidase) up-regulation. 1473 46