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Query: EC:3.5.4.17 (adenosine deaminase)
5,206 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The enzymes of adenosine metabolism were investigated in suspensions of epididymal mouse spermatozoa incubated under conditions which support capacitation in vitro. High levels of adenosine deaminase activity were found in sperm suspensions, but the enzyme was located in the surrounding medium and was not intrinsic to spermatozoa. 5'-Nucleotidase was also present in the surrounding medium while in sperm cells it existed as an ecto-enzyme. Adenosine was not metabolized by washed spermatozoa under conditions used for the assay of adenosine deaminase or adenosine kinase, but it was metabolized rapidly by unwashed sperm suspensions. Incubation of sperm suspensions in conditions which modulate fertilizing ability resulted in small alterations in intrinsic 5'-nucleotidase activity of spermatozoa. In contrast, the activity of adenosine deaminase was not consistently modulated by such manipulations. Adenosine deaminase and 5'-nucleotidase exhibited similar kinetic parameters to enzymes from other sources and their activities were inhibited by coformycin and alpha, beta-methylene adenosine 5'-diphosphate, respectively. These studies highlight the low adenosine-metabolizing ability of spermatozoa coupled with the extensive metabolism in the medium which surrounds them. Extracellular adenosine metabolism can therefore occur and may modulate capacitation in vitro.
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PMID:Enzymes of adenosine metabolism in mouse sperm suspensions. 284 Apr 94

The effect of inhibiting adenosine-metabolizing enzymes on sperm fertilizing ability was studied to investigate a possible role for endogenously generated adenosine in the regulation of capacitation. The compounds used have been shown to be effective inhibitors of the relevant enzymes in similarly incubated mouse sperm suspensions. Inhibition of 5'-nucleotidase activity with alpha, beta-methylene adenosine 5'-diphosphate (AMPCP), to reduce available endogenous adenosine, caused a dose-dependent inhibition of the fertilizing ability of partially capacitated spermatozoa, which was significant with 100 and 250 microM AMPCP. Conversely, inhibition of adenosine deaminase with 100 nM coformycin, to increase available endogenous adenosine, promoted the fertilizing ability of partially capacitated spermatozoa when the fertilization rate of control suspensions was low. However, coformycin had no effect on sperm suspensions with moderate fertilizing ability, and it inhibited fertilizing ability when added to capacitated spermatozoa. These data are consistent with a promotion of the early stages of capacitation by endogenously generated adenosine and suggest that sensitivity to adenosine changes as capacitation proceeds. Because the majority of adenosine-metabolizing enzyme activity residues in or is directed toward the extracellular compartment in such suspensions, these effects of adenosine may be mediated at the outer surface of the cell. By interacting with receptors on adenylate cyclase, externally produced adenosine could modulate intracellular levels of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), thereby influencing fertilizing ability.
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PMID:Inhibition of adenosine-metabolizing enzymes modulates mouse sperm fertilizing ability: a changing role for endogenously generated adenosine during capacitation. 285 33

Membrane vesicles of horse seminal plasma present at their surface a highly specific serine-type protease, dipeptidyl peptidase IV/CD26, a surface antigen known to characterize human prostasomes. Horse sperm cells expressed at their surface A(1) adenosine receptors (A(1)AR) and ecto-adenosine deaminase (ecto-ADA), both detected by immunoblot analysis, whereas CD26 was visualized at the equatorial segment by immunofluorescence microscopy. In addition to CD26, horse membrane vesicles showed ecto-ADA. The fusion process between horse sperm cells and vesicles was evidenced by confocal microscopy, which showed the localization of CD26 at the postacrosomal region and at the midpiece of the spermatozoa after incubation with vesicles. Moreover, a similar localization of CD26 and ecto-ADA on the spermatozoa was evidenced after fusion. Our results suggest that the interaction CD26/ecto-ADA might be responsible for fusion. Since A(1)ARs are said to be second receptors for ecto-ADA to form ecto-ADA/A(1)AR complexes, and since horse spermatozoa have A(1)ARs at their surface, the interaction CD26/ecto-ADA/A(1)AR during the fusion process cannot be ruled out.
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PMID:CD26 and adenosine deaminase interaction: its role in the fusion between horse membrane vesicles and spermatozoa. 1045 60

The presence of A1 adenosine receptors (A1AR) in mammalian spermatozoa was previously demonstrated by radiochemical and immunochemical detection. This study was performed to investigate the cellular location of the A1AR to determine whether these receptors were somehow connected with ecto-adenosine deaminase and to evaluate their function in calcium uptake. By immunofluorescence staining we showed that in mammalian spermatozoa A1AR were constantly localized in the acrosomal region. This finding was confirmed by immunogold detection. Confocal analyses with anti-A1 and anti-ADA antibodies showed a high degree of co-localization. Calcium loading assay showed that this association was functional and affected calcium accumulation in mammalian spermatozoa. Therefore, we concluded that the acrosomal localization of A1AR was a constant feature in mammalian sperm. Moreover, these A1 receptors were functionally coupled to ecto-ADA and were able to modulate calcium uptake into an IP3-gated store.(J Histochem Cytochem 48:1163-1171, 2000)
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PMID:Immunolocalization of A1 adenosine receptors in mammalian spermatozoa. 1095 Aug 74

Membrane vesicles were isolated from rabbit seminal plasma. Electron microscopy analyses showed the presence of numerous small, round vesicles with a diameter of about 70 nm. Determination of enzyme activities was carried out by high performance liquid chromatography and showed that the vesicles can degrade the diadenosine polyphosphates (ApnA), Ap3A and Ap4A and ATP and ADP, but not AMP. Studies of the degradation of diadenosine compounds by the vesicles present in seminal fluid showed an increasing production of AMP as the by-product and a time-dependent generation of dephosphorylated products consistent with the presence of ecto-ATP diphosphophosphatase (ecto-apyrase). In the presence of rabbit spermatozoa, AMP did not accumulate because 5'nucleotidase and adenosine deaminase, present at the surface of sperm cells, transformed AMP into adenosine and inosine. The effects of seminal fluid vesicles and diadenosine compounds on the acquisition of fertilizing capacity by rabbit spermatozoa were evaluated by Pisum sativum agglutinin fluorescein isothiocyanate conjugated staining. The results obtained with uncapacitated spermatozoa showed that the capacitating effector BSA could be substituted efficiently by the addition of diadenosine compounds and vesicles previously incubated for 2 h to the capacitative medium. Under these experimental conditions, the spontaneous acrosome reaction rate was not increased. Capacitated rabbit spermatozoa did not undergo acrosome reaction when l-alpha-lysophosphatidylcholine was substituted by diadenosine compounds previously incubated with vesicles. In conclusion, this study has shown that rabbit seminal fluid vesicles can degrade diadenosine compounds to AMP and that the addition of the vesicles and diadenosine compounds to uncapacitated rabbit spermatozoa favours the acquisition of the fertilizing capacity.
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PMID:Effects of diadenosine polyphosphates and seminal fluid vesicles on rabbit sperm cells. 1277 5