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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)

Acetylcholine and ATP are costored and coreleased during synaptic activity at the electric organ of Torpedo. It has been suggested that released ATP is converted to adenosine at the synaptic cleft, and in turn this nucleoside would depress the evoked release of acetylcholine. In the present communication we have used a chemiluminescent reaction that let us to monitor continuously the presence of adenosine in this preparation. The chemiluminescent reaction is based on the conversion of adenosine into uric acid and H2O2 by adenosine deaminase, nucleoside phosphorylase, and xanthine oxidase enzymes. The hydrogen peroxide has been detected by peroxidase-luminol mixture. The reaction has a sensitivity on the picomol range and discerned between Adenosine, AMP, ADP, and ATP. We have developed this technique in the hope of understanding whether adenosine is released during synaptic activity or it comes from the released ATP. We have studied the release or formation of adenosine in fragments of the electric organ and in isolated cholinergic nerve terminals obtained from it. In both conditions we have followed the effect of potassium stimulation upon the detection of adenosine. Potassium stimulation increased the extracellular adenosine either in slices or the synaptosomal fraction of Torpedo electric organ. The presence of alpha, beta-methylene ADP, an inhibitor of 5'-nucleotidase, inhibits the detection of adenosine, suggesting that extracellular adenosine is a consequence of ectocellular dephosphorylation of released ATP.
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PMID:The release of adenosine at the electric organ of Torpedo. A study using a continuous chemiluminescent method. 232 27

A soluble 5'-nucleotidase was purified 200-fold from pigeon heart. The enzyme (1) had an apparent molecular mass close to 150 kDa, (2) had a neutral pH optimum and hydrolysed a wide range of nucleoside 5'-monophosphates with a 15-fold preference for AMP over IMP, (3) at near-physiological concentrations of AMP was activated by ADP but not by ATP, (4) was inhibited by high Mg2+ concentration and high ionic strength, (5) was weakly inhibited by p-nitrophenol phosphate and Pi, and (6) was non-competitively inhibited more potently by 5'-deoxy-5'-isobutylthioinosine than by 5'-deoxy-5'-isobutylthioadenosine, but not by [alpha,beta-methylene]ADP. The data show that the enzyme is distinct from the ecto-5'-nucleotidase and from the previously purified IMP-specific 5'-nucleotidase. They also predict that the enzyme is activated during ATP catabolism and hence will generate a more-than-linear increase in the adenosine-formation rate in response to an increase in cytosolic AMP concentration.
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PMID:Partial purification and properties of an AMP-specific soluble 5'-nucleotidase from pigeon heart. 234 53

We have undertaken the analytical fractionation of epithelial cells from toad urinary bladder, a tissue extensively used to study epithelial transport of ions and water. In an attempt to establish markers for the main subcellular organelles, a number of enzymes were assayed in cell homogenates. The nearly ubiquitous plasma membrane marker 5'-nucleotidase, and the transferases that donate N-acetylglucosaminyl, galactosyl, and sialyl residues to glycoproteins and glycolipids in the Golgi complex were not detectable. Glucose-6-phosphatase activity was low in relation to that of nonspecific phosphatases and, therefore, not suitable for identifying the endoplasmic reticulum. Like the cytosolic enzyme lactate, dehydrogenase, catalase was essentially found in the high-speed supernatant, with a noteworthy part of aminopeptidase (substrate, leucyl-beta-naphthylamide) and NAD glycohydrolase. Other enzymes, including cytochrome c oxidase, acid phosphatase, acid N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, alkaline phosphatase, alkaline phosphodiesterase I, nucleoside diphosphatase (substrate ADP), oligomycin-resistant Mg++-ATPase, and mannosyltransferase (acceptor, dolichylphosphate) were fairly active and largely sedimentable. After differential centrifugation, cytochrome oxidase, acid phosphatase, and acid N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase were typically associated with the large granule fraction, whereas the other sedimentable enzymes exhibited a broad distribution profile overlapping the nuclear, large granule, and microsome fractions. Their behavior in density equilibrium centrifugation is examined in a companion paper.
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PMID:Subcellular fractionation of epithelial cells from toad urinary bladder. 1. Assay of marker enzymes and differential centrifugation. 250 71

We have evaluated the impact of inhibiting adenine nucleotide dephosphorylation on the metabolic and functional consequences of renal ischemia. Intramuscular injection of the ADP-analogue adenosine alpha, beta-methylene diphosphate (AMP-CP) achieved a 70% reduction in 5'-nucleotidase activity, as measured in crude extracts of rat kidney. AMPCP-treated animals had an increased residual nucleotide pool at the end of 45 min of ischemia compared with untreated rats. Assessment of renal ATP by 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) in vivo during reflow demonstrates the following: 1) higher rapid initial recovery of ATP (69.3 +/- 1.2 vs. 50.0 +/- 0.5% control value, P less than 0.005), 2) accelerated rate of ATP restoration (0.20 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.11 +/- 0.01% control/min, P less than 0.005), and 3) significantly enhanced renal ATP content after 120 min (93.6 +/- 2.0 vs. 63.1 +/- 0.7% control, P less than 0.005). Kidney function, as measured by the rate of inulin clearance 24 h after the insult, was also significantly improved in AMPCP-treated rats (725 +/- 50 vs. 313 +/- 28 microliters.min-1.100 g body wt-1). Thus inhibition of 5'-nucleotidase results in enhanced metabolic and functional recovery from a renal ischemic insult.
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PMID:Protection of the kidney against ischemic injury by inhibition of 5'-nucleotidase. 253 26

Three distinct 5'-phosphomonoesterase activities were isolated from soluble fractions of human placenta, cultured human T and B lymphoblasts, and rat liver using 5'-AMP-sepharose 4B affinity chromatography. We define these activities as "low-Km" 5'-nucleotidase, "high-Km" 5'-nucleotidase, and nonspecific phosphatase. High-Km 5'-nucleotidase was eluted with 0.5 M NaCl, low-Km 5'-nucleotidase was eluted with 10 mM ADP, and nonspecific phosphatase was not retained on the column. We have found significant variability in the relative content of high- to low-Km activities in the tissues studied with the ratios ranging from 5.5 to 264. The properties were studied after further purification. The molecular mass of the low-Km enzymes ranged from 72.5 to 209 kDa, optimum pH ranged from 7.4 to 9.0, Km for AMP ranged from 7 to 15 microM, and Km for IMP ranged from 10 to 26 microM. The molecular mass of the high-Km enzymes ranged from 182 to 210 kDa, pH optimum was at 6.5, Km for AMP ranged from 3.0 to 9.4 mM, and the Km for IMP ranged from 0.3 to 0.5 mM. The data indicate that the soluble low- and high-Km 5'-nucleotidase coexist in the mammalian cells and tissues studied. These observations suggest a complex system for the regulation of nucleoside 5'-monophosphate dephosphorylation.
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PMID:AMP and IMP dephosphorylation by soluble high- and low-Km 5'-nucleotidases. 253 71

The tick Boophilus microplus contains a nucleoside phosphate-hydrolysing enzyme which, in many respects, resembles the well characterized 5'-nucleotidase from mammalian tissue. The tick enzyme has been purified to homogeneity. It is a membrane-bound glycoprotein with an apparent Mr of 67,000 and, although it fails to hydrolyse a range of nucleoside 2'- or 3'-monophosphates, it has broad specificity for the 5' derivatives. Further investigation of the enzyme's substrate specificity, however, shows some important differences from the mammalian nucleotidases. It hydrolyses both bis-p-nitrophenyl phosphate and p-nitrophenyl phenylphosphonate, typical substrates for phosphodiesterases. However, the tick enzyme is most strikingly different from the mammalian enzymes in that it hydrolyses not only AMP but ADP and ATP as well. Further, the products of the hydrolysis of ATP are adenosine and tripolyphosphate, a reaction which has not been reported previously. The products of ADP hydrolysis are adenosine and pyrophosphate.
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PMID:Purification and properties of a novel nucleotide-hydrolysing enzyme (5'-nucleotidase) from Boophilus microplus. 253 5

In view of its vasodilatory effect on the coronary circulation (probably mediated by adenosine) and its metabolic compartmentalization (intramitochondrial activation to form acetyl-CoA), the metabolic effects of acetate were studied in isolated rat heart mitochondria. Acetate caused conversion of adenylates to AMP and the formation of adenosine. Adenylate efflux was inhibited by carboxyatractyloside but not by N-ethylmaleimide. The intramitochondrial accumulation of AMP was enhanced by carboxyatractyloside during acetate metabolism and the formation of extramitochondrial adenosine inhibited. A carboxyatractyloside-sensitive unidirectional AMP influx with a Km of 50 microM and Vmax of 11 nmol/min per mg mitochondrial protein was also observed. The mitochondrial adenosine content was high and constant during the experiments. The steep apparent concentration gradient of adenosine indicates that most of the mitochondrial adenosine is tightly bound to protein. Adenosine formation was proportional to the extramitochondrial AMP concentration, showing that the 5'-nucleotidase activity of cardiac mitochondrial preparations is extramitochondrial in origin. The data suggest that the mitochondrial ATP/ADP carrier is capable of transporting AMP and that intramitochondrial AMP is recycled during acetate metabolism in the myocardium partially by means of the ATP/ADP translocator, leading to an increase in extramitochondrial AMP and adenosine formation.
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PMID:Adenine nucleotide transport and adenosine production in isolated rat heart mitochondria during acetate metabolism. 254 56

We have used the rat isolated, perfused heart to study the metabolism of adenine nucleotides on a single passage through the coronary circulation. Low doses (3-30 nmol) of ATP, ADP, or AMP injected as a bolus were extensively catabolized by ectoenzymes. Increasing doses of each nucleotide demonstrated saturability of catabolism that occurred at significantly lower doses of AMP than of ADP or ATP. The patterns of catabolites formed in each case were consistent with the major pathway of metabolism being sequential dephosphorylation of ATP----ADP----AMP----adenosine, although from experiments in which [3H]ATP was co-injected with unlabeled ADP, it appears that some direct conversion of ATP----AMP can occur. Furthermore, particularly in the presence of excess unlabeled ATP, [3H]ADP was phosphorylated to [3H]ATP, indicating that ectoenzymes capable of interconverting nucleotides are present. By evaluating recovery and metabolism in serial samples collected rapidly after bolus injection, we were able to use the integrated form of the Michaelis-Menten equation as developed by Bronikowski et al. (Math. Biosci. 61: 237-266, 1982) to derive Michaelis constant (Km) and maximum velocity times capillary plasma volume (Amax) values for adenosinetriphosphatase, adenosine diphosphatase, and 5'-nucleotidase (450, 300, and 93 microM; and 5.3, 5.9, and 1.7 mumol/min, respectively). This analysis also indicated that there is a high degree of heterogeneity of path lengths within the coronary circulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Kinetics of adenine nucleotide catabolism in coronary circulation of rats. 254 8

In rat liver mitochondria there exists an AMP-dephosphorylating activity which converts external 5'-AMP to adenosine. It exhibits a pH optimum of 7.5 and a Km(AMP) of 0.085 mM. Furthermore, this activity is stimulated by magnesium (Km = 0.5 mM) and seems to be not affected by low concentrations of ATP or ADP. From the characteristics of the enzyme the existence of a 5'-nucleotidase in rat liver mitochondria which is localized on the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane was concluded. The enzyme may be important for the production of cellular adenosine.
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PMID:Identification and characteristics of a novel mitochondrial 5'-nucleotidase in rat liver. 254 10

Biologically active concentrations of potently vasoactive and platelet-active adenine nucleotides are generated in plasma by a variety of pathophysiological mechanisms. Although there is evidence that ATP and ADP are inactivated by endothelial ectonucleotidases, there has been little attempt to study the metabolic routes of their catabolism in blood or to assess the contribution of this process to their clearance in vivo. Therefore, we have studied the rates and patterns of catabolism of ATP, ADP, and AMP in whole blood, plasma, and isolated blood cells. Rates of degradation of each nucleotide in cell-free plasma ranged from 0.07-0.32 nmol/min/ml with 1 microM substrates to 1.1-3.6 nmol/min/ml with 100 microM substrates. The pattern of catabolism indicated that sequential dephosphorylation from ATP----ADP----AMP----adenosine occurs. In whole blood, the pattern was similar although ATP and ADP (but not AMP) breakdown was more rapid. This was due to leukocyte ectonucleotidase activity. The use of selective inhibitors demonstrated that catabolism was not due to nonspecific phosphatase activity and that plasma 5'-nucleotidase is distinct from ATPase or ADPase. In leukocytes, ATPase and ADPase activities were distinguishable, and each contributed substantially to the rates of catabolism in whole blood. Leukocyte 5'-nucleotidase did not measurably contribute to AMP dephosphorylation in blood. By comparison, ecto-ATPase and ecto-ADPase activities on cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells were similar to those on leukocytes while endothelial 5'-nucleotidase per 10(6) cells was equivalent to the soluble activity in 1 ml of blood or plasma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Metabolism of adenine nucleotides in human blood. 254 57


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