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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)
This study was aimed at defining the role of vascular endothelium in the transport and metabolism of adenosine. For this purpose, endothelium-intact and endothelium-denuded isolated rat aortas, perfused at constant flow (2 ml/min), were prelabeled with 3H-adenosine or 3H-inosine for 10 minutes at concentrations of 0.012-100 microM. Sequestration of adenosine by endothelium was determined from radioactivity recovered during selective endothelial cell removal with deoxycholic acid (0.75% for 15 seconds). In the physiological concentration range of adenosine (0.012-1 microM), fractional sequestration by endothelium was 90-92% of the total adenosine incorporation by the aorta. Endothelial sequestration of inosine at 0.1 microM was 85%. At 100 microM adenosine or inosine, fractional sequestration by aortic endothelium was 33% and 39%, respectively. Analysis of the specific radioactivity of adenine nucleotides extracted from prelabeled aortas indicated that most of the adenosine was incorporated into endothelial adenine nucleotides. Incorporation of inosine into endothelial
ATP
was approximately 15% that of adenosine. Inhibition of aortic
adenosine deaminase
with erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine (EHNA) did not influence sequestration of 0.1 microM adenosine, but resulted in a 49% reduction of total endothelial incorporation at 100 microM adenosine. Transfer of radioactive purines from the endothelium to underlying smooth muscle after prelabeling was equivalent to only 1%/hr of total endothelial radioactivity. Our findings suggested that 1) macrovascular endothelium of the aorta constitutes a highly effective metabolic barrier for circulating adenosine and inosine; 2) transfer of labeled adenine nucleotides from endothelium to underlying smooth muscle is rather small and most likely proceeds via dephosphorylated purine compounds; and 3) measurement of adenosine trapping in endothelial and smooth muscle compartments overestimates the transendothelial adenosine concentration gradient.
...
PMID:Transendothelial transport and metabolism of adenosine and inosine in the intact rat aorta. 272 Sep 15
2'-Deoxycoformycin (dCF), a potent
adenosine deaminase
inhibitor, has been reported to display greater toxicity for T than for B lymphoblasts. Since this compound can block DNA replication and since this effect is mediated by the intracellular
ATP
/dATP balance, its possible effect on DNA ligase was investigated. dCF at relatively low concentrations (1 microM), in association with dATP (100 microM), is a strong inhibitor of DNA ligase in T blasts, whereas it has no significant effect in B blasts at this concentration. The AMP-ligase complex is the target of the observed inhibition because the combined presence of the inhibitor and dATP results in a more stable dAMP-ligase complex. Because of this observation and of the greater
adenosine deaminase
activity observed in T cells, the dATP mediated dCF inhibition of ligase might be the crucial replication target of T cell toxicity. These observations are discussed in terms of T immunodeficiencies including Graft Versus Host Disease and related syndromes.
...
PMID:dATP-mediated inhibition of DNA ligase by 2'-deoxycoformycin in T and B cell leukemia. 278 73
Deoxycoformycin (DCF) is a specific inhibitor of
adenosine deaminase
(
ADA
) and has been shown to be active in lymphoid neoplasms. Cytotoxicity is thought to be mediated by the accumulation of deoxyadenosine (AdR) and deoxyadenosine triphosphate (dATP) which inhibits ribonucleotide reductase and DNA synthesis in rapidly proliferating cells. Others suggested mechanisms leading to cell death particularly in non-dividing cells include depletion of
ATP
and NAD pools, inhibition of S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) hydrolase and induction of DNA strand breaks. In patients with high leukemic counts who were subsequently treated with DCF, we have studied (a) the levels of
ADA
, ecto-5'-nucleotidase (5NT), deoxyadenosine kinase (AdR-kinase) and SAH-hydrolase in the leukemic cells; [b) the in-vitro effects of DCF on dATP,
ATP
, NAD, SAH-hydrolase levels and on DNA strand breaks; and (c) the correlation between these parameters with clinical response to DCF. No significant difference in
ADA
, 5NT, AdR-kinase and SAH-hydrolase activities could be found between responders and non-responders. Incubation of the leukemic cells in vitro with DCF caused an inhibition of
ADA
, an accumulation of dATP, a moderate reduction in
ATP
and NAD levels, a suppression of SAH-hydrolase activity and an increase in DNA strand breaks in practically all the leukemic samples, irrespective of clinical response. Our results show that neither measurement of these enzymes nor studies of these biochemical sequelae of
ADA
inhibition in vitro predicts clinical responsiveness to DCF therapy.
...
PMID:Enzyme activities of leukemic cells and biochemical changes induced by deoxycoformycin in vitro--lack of correlation with clinical response. 278 18
Deoxyadenosine metabolism was investigated in rabbit growth plate and articular cartilage to elucidate the biochemical basis for the chondro-osseous dysplasia observed in
adenosine deaminase
(
ADA
) deficiency. Models of ADA deficiency, the combination of deoxy-adenosine and either of 2
ADA
inhibitors, were selectively toxic to immature cartilage, supporting the hypothesis that the chondro-osseous dysplasia of ADA deficiency is the consequence of the enzyme deficiency. Depletion of
ATP
may play a role in the altered chondrocyte viability and function observed in this model.
...
PMID:Differential deoxyadenosine toxicity to immature rabbit cartilage in vitro. A model for the chondro-osseous dysplasia of adenosine deaminase deficiency. 278 22
The mechanism of the depletion of
ATP
, recorded in the erythrocytes of
adenosine deaminase
-deficient children and of leukemia patients treated with deoxycoformycin, was investigated in normal human erythrocytes treated with this inhibitor of
adenosine deaminase
. Deoxyadenosine, which accumulates in both clinical conditions, provoked a dose-dependent accumulation of dATP, depletion of
ATP
, and increases in the production of inosine plus hypoxanthine. Concomitantly, there was an increase of AMP and IMP, but not of adenosine, indicating that catabolism proceeded by way of AMP deaminase. A series of nucleoside analogues (9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine, N6-methyladenosine, 6-methylmercaptopurine ribonucleoside, tubercidin, ribavirin, and N-1-ribosyl-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide riboside) also stimulated adenine nucleotide catabolism and increased AMP and IMP to various extents. The effects of deoxyadenosine and of the nucleoside analogues were prevented by 5'-iodotubercidin, an inhibitor of adenosine kinase. Strikingly, they were reversed if the inhibitor was added after the accumulation of nucleotide analogues and initiation of adenine nucleotide catabolism. Further analyses revealed linear relationships between the rate of phosphorylation of deoxyadenosine and nucleoside analogues and the increase in AMP and between the elevation of the latter above a threshold concentration of 10 microM and the rate of adenine nucleotide catabolism. Kinetic studies with purified erythrocytic AMP deaminase, at physiological concentrations of its effectors, showed that the enzyme is nearly inactive up to 10 microM AMP and increases in activity above this threshold. We conclude that the main mechanism whereby deoxyadenosine and nucleoside analogues stimulate catabolism of adenine nucleotides by way of AMP deaminase in erythrocytes is elevation of AMP, secondary to the phosphorylation of the nucleosides.
...
PMID:Mechanism of adenosine triphosphate catabolism induced by deoxyadenosine and by nucleoside analogues in adenosine deaminase-inhibited human erythrocytes. 278 93
1. The effects of
adenosine deaminase
, inosine, alkylxanthines (8-phenyltheophylline (8-PT), theophylline and isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX], dipyridamole, alpha, beta-methylene ADP (AOPCP) and
ATP
analogues (alpha, beta-methylene
ATP
and beta, gamma-methylene
ATP
) on evoked end-plate potentials (e.p.p.s) were investigated in innervated sartorius muscles of the frog, in which twitches had been prevented with tubocurarine. The effects of 8-PT and IBMX on the amplitude and quantal content of e.p.p.s were also investigated in innervated sartorius muscles of the frog, in which twitches had been prevented with high-magnesium solutions. 2. Adenosine deaminase reversibly increased the amplitude of e.p.p.s and prevented the reduction caused by exogenously applied adenosine on e.p.p. amplitude. The increase caused by
adenosine deaminase
was equivalent to the decrease caused by 12 +/- 5.8 microM-adenosine on e.p.p. amplitude. 3. Inosine, the product of adenosine deamination, was virtually devoid of effect on e.p.p.s. 4. The adenosine receptor antagonists at the frog neuromuscular junction, 8-PT and theophylline, increased in a concentration-dependent manner the amplitude of e.p.p.s in the presence of tubocurarine. 8-PT increased the amplitude and quantal content of e.p.p.s in the presence of high magnesium. IBMX, which does not behave as an adenosine receptor antagonist at the frog neuromuscular junction, decreased the amplitude of e.p.p.s in the presence of tubocurarine or high-magnesium solutions. 5. Dipyridamole, an adenosine uptake blocker, decreased the amplitude of e.p.p.s, and in a concentration that did not affect neuromuscular transmission potentiated the depressing effect of adenosine, but not that of 2-chloroadenosine, on the amplitude of e.p.p.s. 6. AOPCP, an inhibitor of 5'-nucleotidase, increased the amplitude of e.p.p.s and markedly attenuated the depressing effect of
ATP
, but not that of adenosine, on e.p.p. amplitude. 7. The
ATP
analogue, alpha, beta-methylene
ATP
, which is not a substrate for 5'-nucleotidase, was virtually devoid of effect on e.p.p.s. beta, gamma-Methylene
ATP
, which can be a substrate for 5'-nucleotidase, mimicked the depressing effect of
ATP
on e.p.p. amplitude, an effect which was also reduced by AOPCP. 8. It is concluded that in conditions in which the initial quantal content is assumed to be normal (1) endogenous adenosine depresses neuromuscular transmission, (2) at the neuromuscular junction adenosine is inactivated through a dipyridamole-sensitive uptake process, and (3) released adenine nucleotides might contribute to the pool of endogenous adenosine which modulates neuromuscular transmission.
...
PMID:On the role, inactivation and origin of endogenous adenosine at the frog neuromuscular junction. 282 Dec 40
By means of agonist and enzyme experiments, the relative importance of endogenous adenosine, adenine nucleotides or other purines as modulators of cholinergic neuroeffector transmission in preparations of guinea-pig ileum muscle has been examined. Adenosine, 2-chloroadenosine, AMP, ADP,
ATP
and AMPPNP reversibly inhibited contractile responses to transmural stimulation of the guinea-pig ileum longitudinal muscle. 5'-adenylate deaminase dose-dependently antagonized the inhibitory effect of adenosine, AMP, ADP,
ATP
and AMPPNP, but not that of 2-chloroadenosine. 8-p-sulphophenyltheophylline,
adenosine deaminase
and 5'-adenylate deaminase enhanced contractile responses to transmural nerve stimulation. Adenosine deaminase and 5'-adenylate deaminase were virtually equiactive whereas 8-p-sulphophenyltheophylline was much more effective, and the theophylline derivative also enhanced contractile responses in preparations pretreated with
adenosine deaminase
or 5'-adenylate deaminase. Moreover, 8-p-sulphophenyltheophylline abolished the inhibition by dipyridamole, whereas
adenosine deaminase
and 5'-adenylate deaminase only partly antagonized the inhibitory effect of dipyridamole. Application of 5'-adenylate deaminase did not enhance the nerve-induced contractions in preparations pretreated with
adenosine deaminase
or a combination of dipyridamole and
adenosine deaminase
. In conclusion,
adenosine deaminase
and 5'-adenylate deaminase enhanced the nerve-induced contractions in the ileum, and, since 5'-adenylate deaminase was inactive after pretreatment with
adenosine deaminase
, this suggests that endogenous adenosine rather than 5'-adenine nucleotides modulated cholinergic neurotransmission in the ileum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:On the nature of endogenous purines modulating cholinergic neurotransmission in the guinea-pig ileum. 282 30
Incubation of hepatocytes from 24 h-starved rats in the presence of 0.5 mM-adenosine decreased gluconeogenesis from lactate, but not from alanine. The inhibition of gluconeogenesis was associated with a stimulation of ketone-body production and an inhibition of pyruvate oxidation. These metabolic changes were suppressed in the presence of iodotubercidin (an inhibitor of adenosine kinase), but were reinforced in the presence of deoxycoformycin (an inhibitor of
adenosine deaminase
); 2-chloroadenosine induced no change in gluconeogenesis from lactate. These data indicate that the inhibition of gluconeogenesis by adenosine probably results from its conversion into adenine nucleotides. In the presence of lactate or pyruvate, but not with alanine or asparagine, this conversion resulted in a decrease in the [
ATP
]/[ADP] ratio in both mitochondrial and cytosolic compartments. Adenosine decreased the Pi concentration with all gluconeogenic substrates.
...
PMID:The mechanism by which adenosine decreases gluconeogenesis from lactate in isolated rat hepatocytes. 282 38
The pathways of AMP degradation and the metabolic fate of adenosine were studied in cultured myotubes under physiological conditions and during artificially induced enhanced degradation of
ATP
. The metabolic pathways were gauged by tracing the flow of radioactivity from
ATP
, prelabelled by incubation of the cultures with [14C]adenine, into the various purine derivatives. The fractional flow from AMP to inosine through adenosine was estimated by the use of the
adenosine deaminase
(
EC 3.5.4.4
) inhibitors, coformycin and 2'-deoxycoformycin. The activities of the enzymes involved with AMP and adenosine metabolism were determined in cell extracts. The results demonstrate that under physiological conditions, there is a small but significant flow of label from
ATP
to diffusible bases and nucleosides, most of which are effluxed to the incubation medium. This catabolic flow is mediated almost exclusively by the activity of AMP deaminase (EC 3.5.4.6), rather than by AMP 5'-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5), reflecting the markedly higher Vmax/Km ratio for the deaminase. Enhancement of
ATP
degradation by inhibition of glycolysis or by combined inhibition of glycolysis and of electron transport resulted in a markedly greater flux of label from adenine nucleotides to nucleosides and bases, but did not alter significantly the ratio between AMP deamination and AMP dephosphorylation, which remained around 19:1. Combined inhibition of glycolysis and of electron transport resulted, in addition, in accumulation of label in IMP, reaching about 20% of total AMP degraded. In the intact myotubes at low adenosine concentration, the anabolic activity of adenosine kinase was at least 4.9-fold the catabolic activity of
adenosine deaminase
, in accord with the markedly higher Vmax/Km ratio of the kinase for adenosine. The results indicate the operation in the myotube cultures, under various rates of
ATP
degradation, of the AMP to IMP limb of the purine nucleotide cycle. On the other hand, the formation of purine bases and nucleosides, representing the majority of degraded
ATP
, indicates inefficient activity of the IMP to AMP limb of the cycle, as well as inefficient salvage of hypoxanthine under these conditions.
...
PMID:Pathways of adenine nucleotide catabolism in primary rat muscle cultures. 282
A simple and fast ion pair reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been developed for the simultaneous determination of
ATP
, ADP, AMP, GTP, GDP, IMP, NADP+, NADPH+, NAD+, NADH, ADP-ribose, inosine, adenosine, hypoxanthine, and xanthine. This method allows us to have a complete picture of the most important nucleotides present in fresh human erythrocytes. Furthermore it is particularly useful in the study of the erythrocyte adenine nucleotide catabolism allowing the detection of degradation products such as IMP, inosine, adenosine, hypoxanthine, and xanthine. The separation of the compounds under investigation is achieved in less than 15 min using a reversed-phase 3-micron Supelcosil LC-18 column and adding tetrabutylammonium, as ion-pair agent, to the buffers. The short time of analysis, the high reproducibility of the system, and the accurate evaluation of the compounds of interest make this method particularly suitable for routine analysis. Finally it is possible to use this assay as an alternative method of measuring activities of enzymes which catalyze reactions involving some of these compounds, as in the case of Na+-K+ ATPase, AMP deaminase, and
adenosine deaminase
.
...
PMID:A very fast ion-pair reversed-phase HPLC method for the separation of the most significant nucleotides and their degradation products in human red blood cells. 282 56
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