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Query: EC:3.5.4.4 (
adenosine deaminase
)
5,136
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Experiments over the past decade have revealed a third component in the autonomic nervous system which is neither adrenergic nor cholinergic. These nerves are strongly represented in the gastrointestinal tract of a wide range of vertebrate species and have also been identified in lung, trachea, retractor penis, bladder, oesophagus, eye, seminal vesicle and in some parts of the cardiovascular system and brain. Evidence has been presented that the principal active substance released by these nerves in the gut is a purine nucleotide, probably ATP, and they have therefore been termed 'purinergic'. The evidence includes: (1) synthesis and storage of ATP in nerves; (2) release of ATP from the nerves when they are stimulated; (3) mimicry by exogenously applied ATP of the action of nerve-released transmitter; (4) the presence of Mg2+-activated ATPase,
5'-nucleotidase
and
adenosine deaminase
, enzymes which inactivate ATP; (5) the similar blocking and potentiating effects produced by drugs on the responses to exogenously applied ATP and nerve stimulation. A tentative model for the synthesis, storage, release and inactivation of ATP during purinergic nerve transmission is proposed. Some properties of purinergic receptors are described.
...
PMID:The purinergic nerve hypothesis. 2 31
Intact cells of Bacillus cereus catalyze the breakdown of exogenous AMP to hypoxanthine and ribose 1-phosphate through the successive action of
5'-nucleotidase
,
adenosine deaminase
, and inosine phosphorylase. Inosine hydrolase was not detectable, even in crude extracts. Inosine phosphorylase causes a "translocation" of the ribose moiety (as ribose 1-phosphate) inside the cell, while hypoxanthine remains external. Even though the equilibrium of the phosphorolytic reaction favors nucleoside synthesis, exogenous inosine (as well as adenosine and AMP) is almost quantitatively transformed into external hypoxanthine, since ribose 1-phosphate is readily metabolized inside the cell. Most likely, the translocated ribose 1-phosphate enters the sugar phosphate shunt, via its prior conversion into ribose 5-phosphate, thus supplying the energy required for the subsequent uptake of hypoxanthine in B. cereus.
...
PMID:Utilization of exogenous purine compounds in Bacillus cereus. Translocation of the ribose moiety of inosine. 10 Apr 97
Purinergic nerves supply the gastrointestinal tract of vertebrates, including fish, amphibians, reptiles and birds, as well as mammals. Their cell bodies are located in Auerbach's plexus and their axons extend in an anal direction before innervating mainly the circular muscle coat. In the stomach they are controlled by preganglionic cholinergic fibres of parasympathetic origin. They are involved in "receptive relaxation" of the stomach, "descending inhibition" in peristalsis and reflex relaxation of oesophageal and internal anal sphincters. The terminal varicosities of purinergic nerves are characterised by a predominance of "large opaque vesicles," which can be distinguished from the "large granular vesicles" found in small numbers in both adrenergic and cholinergic nerves. Stimulation of purinergic nerves with single pulses produces hyperpolarisations of up to 25 mV (inhibitory junction potentials) in smooth muscle cells. These potentials are unaffected by atropine, adrenergic neuron blocking agents or sympathetic denervation, but are abolished by tetrodotoxin. The "rebound contraction" which characteristically follows cessation of purinergic nerve stimulation is probably due to prostaglandin. Evidence that ATP is the transmitter released from purinergic nerves includes: (1) synthesis and storage of ATP in nerves; (2) release of ATP from the nerves when they are stimulated; (3) exogenously applied ATP mimicking the action of nerve-released transmitter, both producing a specific increase in K+ conductance; (4) the presence of Mg-activated ATPase,
5'-nucleotidase
and
adenosine deaminase
, enzymes which inactivate ATP; (5) drugs (including quinidine, some 2-substituted imidazolines, 2-2'pyridylisatogen and dipyridamole) which produce similar blocking or potentiating effects on the response to exogenously applied ATP and nerve stimulation. Speculations are made about the evolution and development of the nervous system, including the possibility that purinergic nerves are a primitive nerve type.
...
PMID:Comparative studies of purinergic nerves. 17 88
Purine metabolism and reutilization pathways were studied as they applied to normal and leukemic leukocytes. The enzyme activities were expressed in terms of the quantity of protein extracted and per 10(10) cells. Whereas the protein extracted and the enzyme activities from normal lymphocytes were relatively constant, considerable variation was noted in cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). This variability in the properties of the leukemic cells suggests that the difference may be useful in the subclassification of the leukemias. The studies of the complete enzyme system were done with 300 million cells. The extraction of 350,000 normal lymphocytes/mul gave a soluble protein concentration of 1.46+/-0.16 mg protein per ml, and the yield from the same number of CLL lymphocytes varied between 0.72 and 8.32 mg protein per ml. The
5'-nucleotidase
activity gave an inverse correlation with the amount of extractable protein. In individual cases of CLL, the protein concentrations and the
5'-nucleotidase
activities were found on either side of the normal values. In most cases, the
adenosine deaminase
of CLL lymphocytic cell extracts was lower than normal, and the adenosine kinase was higher; in the CLL cells, these two enzymes gave a positive correlation with one another. Little or no difference was observed in the activities of the purine nucleoside phosphorylases in extracts of normal or leukemic lymphocytes and granulocytes. The hypoxanthine-guanine and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activities increased in the leukemic granulocytes but almost always showed a decrease in the CLL lymphocytes when compared with the normal cells. Most of the leukemic cells had greater than normal activities of the enzymes synthesizing phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate when tested with the purines. The total nucleotide produced from adenine and guanine with adenine- and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase was about equal in normal and leukemic lymphocytes, but the proportion of the adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the product was much greater with the leukemic cells. This suggested that the ribosyltransferase activities were the same in both types of cells, but the nucleoside kinases and the nucleoside diphosphate kinases were more active in the leukemic cells. Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase was less active than normal in the CLL cell extracts and was not directly related to the amount of inosine monophosphate generated from hypoxanthine.
...
PMID:Purine metabolic cycle in normal and leukemic leukocytes. 18 45
A model is proposed for the partial depletion of the adenine nucleotide pool in the ischemic perfused rat heart which involves seven enzymes: adenylate cyclase, 3',5'-cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase,
5'-nucleotidase
, adenosine kinase,
adenosine deaminase
, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, and inorganic pyrophosphatase. The computer implementation of this model is in terms of rate laws, several of which were obtained by a systematic least-squares fitting procedure. Depletion of the adenine nucleotide pool is initiated by the release of endogenous noradrenaline into the interstitial fluid, which results from a fall in tissue PO2, and the subsequent activation of adenylate cyclase. In this model the substrate for
5'-nucleotidase
is a membrane-bound AMP pool formed by hydrolysis of extracellular fluid and functions as a vasodilator; excess adenosine is incorporated into the tissue by a "permease" with Michaelis-Menten kinetics and converted to AMP, inosine, and hypoxanthine. Alternative mechanisms, such as the deamination of AMP by adenylate deaminase and conversion of AMP to adenine by AMP pyrophosphorylase, were rejected primarily on qualitative biochemical grounds.
...
PMID:Computer simulation of ischemic rat heart purine metabolism. I. Model construction. 19 89
1. The maximal activities of
5'-nucleotidase
, adenosine kinase and
adenosine deaminase
together with the Km values for their respective substrates were measured in muscle, nervous tissue and liver from a large range of animals to provide information on the mechanism of control of adenosine concentration in the tissues. 2. Detailed evidence that the methods used were optimal for the extraction and assay of these enzymes has been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50088 (16pages) at the British Library Lending Division, Boston Spa, Wetherby, West Yorkshire LS23 7BQ, U.K.,from whom copies can be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1978), 169, 5. This evidence includes the effects of pH and temperature on the activities of the enzymes. 3. In many tissues, the activities of
5'-nucleotidase
were considerably higher than the sum of the activities of adenosine kinase and deaminase, which suggests that the activity of the nucleotidase must be markedly inhibited in vivo so that adenosine does not accumulate. In the tissues in which comparison is possible, the Km of the nucleotidase is higher than the AMP content of the tissue, and since some of the latter may be bound within the cell, the low concentration of substrate may, in part, be responsible for a low activity in vivo. 4. In most tissues and animals investigated, the values of the Km of adenosine kinase for adenosine are between one and two orders of magnitude lower than those for the deaminase. It is suggested that
5'-nucleotidase
and adenosine kinase are simultaneously active so that a substrate cycle between AMP and adenosine is produced: the difference in Km values between kinase and deaminase indicates that, via the cycle, small changes in activity of kinase or nucleotidase produce large changes in adenosine concentration. 5. The activities of adenosine kinase or deaminase from vertebrate muscles are inversely correlated with the activities of phosphorylase in these muscles. Since the magnitude of the latter activities are indicative of the anaerobic nature of muscles, this negative correlation supports the hypothesis that an important role of adenosine is the regulation of blood flow in the aerobic muscles.
...
PMID:Activities and some properties of 5'-nucleotidase, adenosine kinase and adenosine deaminase in tissues from vertebrates and invertebrates in relation to the control of the concentration and the physiological role of adenosine. 21 26
The activities of dTMP kinase (ATP-deoxythymidine monophosphate phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.4.9),
5'-nucleotidase
(5'-ribonucleoside phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.5),
adenosine deaminase
(
adenosine aminohydrolase
,
EC 3.5.4.4
), AMP deaminase (AMP aminohydrolase, EC 3.5.3.6) and ATP-(Mg2+)-ase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) were assayed in mitochondria of normal and regenerating rat liver. In regenerating mitochondria, the dTMP kinase activity increased 20 times,
5'-nucleotidase
(5'Nase) activity for dTMP diminished by 65% and its activity for other nucleoside monophosphates did not change;
adenosine deaminase
activity for adenosine (AR) increased by 40%, but for deoxyadenosine (AdR) decreased by 70%. AMP deaminase and ATP-(Mg2+)-ase activities behaved similarly in mitochondria from regenerating liver, decreasing by 70 and 64% respectively. The changes of the amount of dTMP in mitochondria depend on enzyme activities which regulate the AdR concentration.
...
PMID:Relationship between 5'-nucleotidase, adenosine deaminase, AMP deaminase, ATP-(Mg2+)-ase activities and dTMP kinase activity in rat liver mitochondria. 22 41
1. Enzymes interconnecting the adenylate pool were present in high concentration. 2. AMP and adenosine were easily deaminated by the corresponding enzymes whose high levels were detected. 3. Adenylate was hydrolyzed either by deamination to yield IMP which was further dephosphorylated to inosine or by dephosphorylation to adenosine followed by deamination to inosine. 4. Incubation of gill extract with [-14C]-AMP in the presence and absence of ATP but with
adenosine deaminase
inhibitors allowed demonstration that ATP controlled the balance between these pathways. 5. Some biochemical properties of
5'-nucleotidase
. AMP deaminase and
adenosine deaminase
were defined. 6. Purine salvage enzymes were also estimated.
...
PMID:Aspects of purine metabolism in the gill epithelium of rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri Richardson. 31 37
Adenine nucleotide breakdown to nucleosides and purine bases was measured in cultures of human lymphoblastoid cells following: 1) the inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation in the absence of glucose or 2) the addition of 2-deoxyglucose. A mutant cell line, deficient in adenosine kinase, in the presence of an
adenosine deaminase
inhibitor was used to measure utilization of the two pathways of AMP catabolism involving initial action of either purine
5'-nucleotidase
or AMP deaminase. In such a system the appearance of adenosine induced by the oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor, rotenone, implies that approximately 70% of AMP breakdown occurs via dephosphorylation. By the same method, deamination accounts for 82% of AMP breakdown when 2-deoxyglucose is added. The occurrence of AMP dephosphorylation is not correlated with elevated concentrations of substrate or with decreased concentrations of the inhibitors of
5'-nucleotidase
, ATP and ADP. Dephosphorylation occurs if, and only if, the adenylate energy charge decreases to about 0.6 in these experiments. In cultures deprived of glucose and oxygen, adenine nucleotide degradation via dephosphorylation results in recovery of normal energy charge values.
...
PMID:Adenine nucleotide degradation during energy depletion in human lymphoblasts. Adenosine accumulation and adenylate energy charge correlation. 47 72
Changes in hepatic purine enzyme activities of chicks fed diets containing 11%, 20%, 43% and 80% protein were correlated with protein intake and uric acid production in order to identify those enzymes with activities that parallel closely and may regulate uric acid production. Nucleoside phosphorylase, xanthine dehydrogenase, adenylosuccinate synthetase and adenosine kinase correlated positively with protein intake and uric acid production. Adenosine deaminase,
5'-nucleotidase
(AMP), adenylate deaminase and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase correlated negatively with protein intake and uric acid production. Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and
5'-nucleotidase
(IMP) were unaffected by protein intake and did not correlate with uric acid production. The ratio of adenosine kinase to
adenosine deaminase
correlated positively with protein intake and uric acid production. The increased activities of adenylosuccinate synthetase and adenosine kinase, along with the reduced activities of
5'-nucleotidase
and adenylate deaminase, in liver from chickens fed the 80% compared with the 11% protein diet demonstrate enhanced synthesis of adenine nucleotides. Since adenine nucleotides are essential cofactors for de novo purine synthesis, it is proposed that adenylosuccinate synthetase, adenosine kinase,
5'-nucleotidase
and adenylate deaminase are key enzymes involved in the regulation of purine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Protein intake, hepatic purine enzyme levels and uric acid production in growing chicks. 61 42
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