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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)

A human placental soluble "high Km" 5'-nucleotidase has been separated from "low Km" 5'-nucleotidase and nonspecific phosphatase by AMP-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The enzyme was purified 8000-fold to a specific activity of 25.6 mumol/min/mg. The subunit molecular mass is 53 kDa, and the native molecular mass is 210 kDa, suggesting a tetrameric structure. Soluble high Km 5'-nucleotidase is most active with IMP and GMP and their deoxy derivatives. IMP is hydrolyzed 15 times faster than AMP. The enzyme has a virtually absolute requirement for magnesium ions and is regulated by them. Purine nucleoside 5'-triphosphates strongly activate the enzyme with the potency order dATP greater than ATP greater than GTP. 2,3-Diphosphoglycerate activates the enzyme as potently as ATP. Three millimolar ATP decreased the Km for IMP from 0.33 to 0.09 mM and increased the Vmax 12-fold. ATP activation was modified by the IMP concentration. At 20 microM IMP the ATP-dependent activation curve was sigmoidal, while at 2 mM IMP it was hyperbolic. The A0.5 values for ATP were 2.26 and 0.70 mM, and the relative maximal velocities were 32.9 and 126.0 nmol/min, respectively. Inorganic phosphate shifts the hyperbolic substrate velocity relationship for IMP to a sigmoidal one. With physiological concentrations of cofactors (3 mM ATP, 1-4 mM Pi, 150 mM KCl) at pH 7.4, the enzyme is 25-35 times more active toward 100 microM IMP than 100 microM AMP. These data show that: (a) soluble human placental high Km 5'-nucleotidase coexists in human placenta with the low Km enzyme; (b) under physiological conditions the enzyme favors the hydrolysis of IMP and is critically regulated by IMP, ATP, and Pi levels; and (c) kinetic properties of ATP and IMP are each modified by the other compound suggesting complex interaction of the associated binding sites.
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PMID:High Km soluble 5'-nucleotidase from human placenta. Properties and allosteric regulation by IMP and ATP. 284 5

Of the various species of cellular 5'-nucleotidases, membranous, lysosomal and cytosolic, only the latter are likely to play a role in the physiologic dephosphorylation of the 5'-nucleoside monophosphates present in the cytoplasm. The necessity to preserve cellular ATP renders a strict control of the dephosphorylation as well as of the deamination of AMP mandatory, because both nucleotides are maintained in equilibrium by adenylate kinase. Our studies of cytosolic purine 5'-nucleotidases purified from rat liver and from human erythrocytes, reviewed in this presentation, have shown that both display complex kinetic properties. Both enzymes have markedly higher affinities for IMP and for GMP than for AMP. In addition, they are stimulated by nucleoside triphosphates, among them ATP and GTP, and inhibited by Pi. The erythrocytic purine 5'-nucleotidase is also stimulated by glycerate 2,3-bisphosphate. It could thus be expected that under conditions of ATP and GTP breakdown, particularly when accompanied by an increase in Pi, the dephosphorylation of AMP would be curtailed. To verify this hypothesis, experiments were performed with isolated rat hepatocytes and with human red blood cells. The rate of dephosphorylation of AMP was measured by following time-wise the production of adenosine in the presence of coformycin (or deoxycoformycin) and 5-iodotubercidin. The coformycins inhibit the deamination of adenosine into inosine by adenosine deaminase, and 5-iodotubercidin inhibits the recycling of adenosine into AMP by adenosine kinase. Upon induction of ATP catabolism by the addition of fructose to isolated rat hepatocytes, the dephosphorylation of AMP was nearly completely suppressed. In accordance with these results, the activity of the rat liver cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase, assayed in the presence of concentrations of substrate and effectors mimicking those measured in intact cells following the addition of fructose, was decreased as compared to control conditions. In hepatocytes in which ATP catabolism was induced by suppression of oxygen, the rate of dephosphorylation of AMP increased about 3-fold. However, in contradiction with these data, the activity of the cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase, measured under conditions mimicking anoxia, decreased markedly. In human erythrocytes, dephosphorylation of AMP did not occur under physiologic conditions, but proceeded when ATP catabolism was induced by glucose lack or by alkalinization. The rate of dephosphorylation of AMP was 3-fold higher during glucose deprivation than under alkaline conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Cytosolic purine 5'-nucleotidases of rat liver and human red blood cells: regulatory properties and role in AMP dephosphorylation. 285 49

The metabolism of 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) in L-1210 mouse leukemia cells and human chronic myelocytic leukemia cells (CML cells) was examined. The acid-soluble fractions obtained from cells incubated with [8-14C]6-MP were chromatographed on a Dowex-1 formate resin column using a formic acid linear gradient elution system. Chromatography of the extract of L-1210 cells revealed four principal radioactive peaks. The fraction containing the third peak was hydrolyzed by snake venom 5'-nucleotidase (Crotalus adamanteus). Cellulose thin layer chromatography revealed that the radioactive peak of the hydrolysate corresponded to 6-thioguanosine. The results showed that 6-MP was converted to 6-thioinosinic acid (6-TIMP) and 6-thioguanylic acid (6-TGMP) in L-1210 cells. In order to elucidate the pathway of 6-MP conversion to 6-TGMP, we examined the interaction of [8-14C]6-TIMP and purified IMP dehydrogenase. It was found by DEAE-cellulose thin layer chromatography that the IMP dehydrogenase converted 6-TIMP to 6-thioxanthylic acid (6-TXMP). Dowex-1 chromatography of the acid-soluble extract of human CML cells incubated with [8-14C]-6-MP also revealed a radioactive peak corresponding to 6-TGMP. These results suggest that 6-MP is metabolized to 6-TGMP by serial conversion to 6-TIMP and 6-TXMP through the de novo GMP synthetic pathway in L-1210 cells and human CML cells.
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PMID:Conversion of 6-mercaptopurine to 6-thioguanylic acid in L-1210 cells and human leukemia cells. 285 24

The specific activities of the three enzymes of the inosinate branchpoint are independently regulated when lymphoblasts are grown under various tissue culture conditions. In comparison to rapidly dividing cells, lymphoblasts at high cell density with no cellular division have decreased activity of the enzymes which commit inosinate to adenylate or guanylate, while cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase is relatively preserved. A linear relationship between inosinate dehydrogenase activity and growth rate (r = 0.92) exists in lymphoblasts with slowed growth rates. In contrast, in dividing cells adenylosuccinate synthetase and 5'-nucleotidase do not vary with growth rate. Adenylosuccinate synthetase and inosinate dehydrogenase activities appear to be related to the presence or rate of cellular division, as opposed to the presence or degree of neoplastic transformation. Lymphoblast lines with alterations of specific purine metabolic enzymes have characteristic alteration of the inosinate utilizing enzymes. Deficiencies of purine nucleoside phosphorylase or hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, abnormalities which render the cell unable to salvage purine effectively, are associated with depressed inosinate dehydrogenase activity. Insertion of the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gene into hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient cells normalizes inosinate dehydrogenase activity, while a hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient mutant selected from a hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase-containing line has depressed inosinate dehydrogenase activity. In contrast, overactivity of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase, with enhanced excretion of purines due to excessive production, is associated with elevated inosinate dehydrogenase activity. Inosinate dehydrogenase appears to be regulated according to the availability of purine nucleotides. Patients who overproduce uric acid and potentially have undescribed purine metabolic defects are now being screened for abnormalities in the inosinate branchpoint enzymes.
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PMID:Alterations of inosinate branchpoint enzymes in cultured human lymphoblasts. 286 60

The kinetic properties of highly purified human placental cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase were investigated. Initial velocity studies gave Michaelis constants for AMP, IMP, and CMP of 18, 30, and 2.2 microM, respectively. The enzyme shows the following relative Vmax values: CMP greater than UMP greater than dUMP greater than GMP greater than AMP greater than dCMP greater than IMP. The activity was magnesium-dependent, and this cation binds sequentially with a Km of 14 microM for AMP and an apparent Km of 6 mM for magnesium. A large variety of purine, pyrimidine, and pyridine compounds exert an inhibitory effect on enzyme activity. IMP, GMP, and NADH produce almost 100% inhibition at 1.0 mM. Nucleoside di- and triphosphates are potent inhibitors. ATP and ADP are competitive inhibitors with respect to AMP and IMP as substrates with Ki values of 100 and 15 microM, respectively. Inorganic phosphate is a noncompetitive inhibitor with Ki values of 19 and 43 mM. Nucleosides and other compounds studied produce only a modest decrease of enzyme activity at 1 mM. Our findings suggest that the enzyme is regulated under physiological conditions by the concentrations of magnesium, nucleoside 5'-monophosphates, and nucleoside di- and triphosphates. The nucleotide pool concentration regulates the enzyme possibly by a mechanism of heterogeneous metabolic pool inhibition. These properties of human placental cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase may be related to the control of nucleotide degradation in vivo.
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PMID:Human placental cytoplasmic 5'-nucleotidase. Kinetic properties and inhibition. 300 Oct 58

Intact synaptosomes isolated from the electric organ of the electric ray Torpedo marmorata contain, at their surface, enzyme activities for the hydrolysis of externally applied nucleoside phosphates. The diazonium salt of sulfanilic acid, as a low-molecular-weight, slowly permeating, covalent inhibitory agent, selectively blocks these enzyme activities and leaves intracellular lactate dehydrogenase intact. The ectoenzymes comprise both a nucleoside triphosphate and diphosphate phosphohydrolase, as well as a 5'-nucleotidase. Activity of nonspecific ectophosphatases is absent. The nucleoside triphosphatase hydrolyzes almost equally well ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP, and ITP and is activated to a similar degree by Mg2+ or Ca2+. It has a high affinity for ATP (Km for ATP in the presence of Mg2+, 75 microM; in the presence of Ca2+, 66 microM). Maximal rates in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+ were very similar (34.8 and 32.5 nmol of Pi/min/mg of synaptosomal protein, respectively). Either Mg-ATP or Ca-ATP can act as a true substrate. ADP inhibits hydrolysis of ATP, but AMP is without effect. The nucleoside triphosphatase is not inhibited significantly by a number of inhibitors of mitochondrial Mg2+-ATPase or of Ca2+ + Mg2+-ATPases. It is, however, considerably inhibited by filipin and quercitin. The capacity of intact synaptosomes to hydrolyze also extracellular ADP, GDP, AMP, GMP, and IMP suggests that the nucleoside triphosphatase is part of an enzyme chain that causes complete hydrolysis of the respective nucleoside triphosphate to the nucleoside. We conclude that the cholinergic nerve terminals of the Torpedo electric organ can hydrolyze ATP released on coexocytosis with acetylcholine via an ectonucleoside triphosphatase activity that is different from known endogenous nerve terminal ATPases. The final product of the hydrolysis, adenosine, can then be salvaged by the nerve terminal for resynthesis of ATP. Other possible physiological functions of the ectonucleotidases are discussed.
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PMID:Ectonucleotidase activities associated with cholinergic synaptosomes isolated from Torpedo electric organ. 301 88

The rate of hydrolysis of IMP (0.5 mM) by cytosol 5'-nucleotidase from Artemia embryos was increased up to 7-fold by concentrations of around 10 microM diadenosine tetraphosphate (Ap4A). Half maximal activation of the enzyme was accomplished with 5 microM Ap4A. The Km (S 0.5) values of the nucleotidase for IMP, GMP, AMP, XMP and CMP decreased about 10 fold in the presence of 10 microM Ap4A. Maximum velocity of the enzyme was not affected by Ap4A. ATP had been previously described as an activator of the enzyme. However, comparatively with Ap4A, concentrations of ATP two orders of magnitude higher are needed to elicit similar effects on the enzyme. Preliminary results indicate that Ap4A is also an activator of the cytosol 5'-nucleotidase from rat liver.
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PMID:Diadenosine tetraphosphate activates cytosol 5'-nucleotidase. 301 17

Cytosol 5'-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5) has been purified near homogeneity from Artemia embryos. The enzyme cleaves preferentially IMP and GMP, and to a lesser extent other 5'-mononucleotides. The substrate-velocity plot was hyperbolic with GMP and sigmoidal with AMP. The hydrolysis of GMP is stimulated both by ATP and beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate with the same activation constant of around 0.6 mM. Both nucleotides decreased S0.5 without affecting V. The molecular mass of the native purified enzyme was 165 kDa, and one major band of 42 kDa was detected after sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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PMID:Cytosol 5'-nucleotidase from Artemia embryos. Purification and properties. 303 Jun 28

Corynebacterium glutamicum cells are industrially used for glutamate production. However, the waste that contains microbial cells, cellular debris, residual sugars, ammonia and metabolites seriously pollutes the environment. The cells are recovered and utilized for ribonucleotide production so that the pollution caused by the cells is eliminated. Nucleic acid is extracted from the cells and is hydrolyzed with nuclease P1 from Penicillium citrinum. The hydrolysate is fractionated with Dowex-50 and Dowex-1 into 5'-CMP, 5'-UMP, 5'-GMP and 5'-AMP. The products are characterized by electrophoresis, ultraviolet light absorbance, and 5'-nucleotidase.
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PMID:Utilization of glutamate accumulating bacterial cells for production of ribonucleotides. 303 25

1. 5'-Nucleotidase activity was obtained in a soluble form after treatment of a particulate fraction from Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells with deoxycholate. The relative rates of hydrolysis of 6-thioinosine 5'-phosphate, UMP, AMP, CMP, GMP, IMP, xanthosine monophosphate, thymidine monophosphate and 2',3'-AMP were 180, 129, 100, 93, 83, 79, 46, 41 and 3 respectively. 2. Values found for the Michaelis constant were: AMP, 67+/-12mum; IMP, 111+/-8mum; GMP, 93mum. 3. ATP and thymidine triphosphate were competitive inhibitors of AMP hydrolysis (inhibitor constants 0.4 and 4.8mum respectively); UTP, GTP and CTP were mixed competitive and non-competitive inhibitors. Thymidine triphosphate was a competitive inhibitor of IMP hydrolysis (inhibitor constant 14.4mum) and ATP, UTP and GTP showed mixed competitive and non-competitive inhibition. 4. ATP, thymidine triphosphate, UTP, GTP and CTP did not completely inhibit hydrolysis of AMP, IMP and UMP; the concentrations of ATP required to inhibit AMP and IMP hydrolysis by 50% were 12 and 230mum respectively. 5. Non-hyperbolic curves relating activity to UMP concentration were obtained in the presence and absence of triphosphates. 6. After fractionation on Sephadex G-200 columns a single peak of 5'-nucleotidase activity (particle weight 120000-125000) was obtained with AMP, IMP and GMP as substrates. UMP hydrolysis was catalysed by enzyme in this peak and in two slower peaks corresponding to apparent particle weights of 32000 and 16000; a single component (particle weight 120000), reacting with UMP and insensitive to UTP inhibition, was obtained when the column was eluted with buffer containing 1mm-UMP. 7. The possible significance of the results in the regulation of tumour-cell 5'-nucleotidase is discussed.
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PMID:Inhibition of 5'-nucleotidase from Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells by nucleoside triphosphates. 577 89


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