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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)
Previous work has shown that platelet-derived adenine nucleotides modulate neutrophil superoxide anion (O2-) generation. Additional studies were undertaken to characterize the effects of authentic adenosine (ADO) and its nucleotide derivatives on the inflammatory functions of human neutrophils. Stimulus-specific inhibition of neutrophil O2- generation by ADO in response to
FMLP
was verified. In addition, the ability of ATP, ADP, and AMP to limit neutrophil O2- generation induced by
FMLP
(0.2 to 0.5 microM) was demonstrated. The concentration producing 50% inhibition for nucleotide inhibition of neutrophil O2- generation was in the rank order of ADO (0.1 microM) less than AMP (0.5 microM) less than ADP less than or equal to ATP (5 microM). Guanine and inosine nucleotides (0.01 to 100 microM) did not inhibit
FMLP
-stimulated neutrophil O2- generation. Neutrophil degranulation in response to
FMLP
was only modestly inhibited by adenine nucleotides and ADO. Adenosine and ADP failed to affect chemotaxis of neutrophils stimulated with
FMLP
. The inability of non-metabolizable analogs to mimic the inhibitory effects of authentic ATP or ADP on the neutrophil O2- response suggested that metabolism of added nucleotides is necessary for their effectiveness. Both TLC and HPLC confirmed that ATP and ADP were converted to AMP and ADO after their incubation with unstimulated or
FMLP
-activated neutrophils. The addition of
adenosine deaminase
to neutrophil reaction mixtures in which conversion of added nucleotides was apparent removed detectable ADO but failed to completely abrogate the inhibition of neutrophil O2- generation by accumulated AMP. The kinetics of inhibition of
FMLP
-induced neutrophil O2- generation by ATP and ADP also indicated that conversion of these nucleotides to ADO and/or AMP may be essential for their ability to reduce neutrophil responses.
...
PMID:Regulation of human neutrophil functions by adenine nucleotides. 253 67
Since adenosine and its analogue 2-chloroadenosine prevent neutrophils from generating superoxide anion in response to chemoattractants, we sought to determine whether these agents could inhibit neutrophil-mediated injury of endothelial cells. The chemoattractant N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (
FMLP
, 0.1 microM) enhanced the adherence of neutrophils to endothelial cells twofold (18 +/- 2% vs. 39 +/- 3% adherence, P less than 0.001) and caused substantial neutrophil-mediated injury to endothelial cells (2 +/- 2% vs. 39 +/- 4% cytotoxicity, P less than 0.001). 2-Chloroadenosine (10 microM) not only inhibited the adherence of stimulated neutrophils by 60% (24 +/- 2% adherence, P less than 0.001) but also diminished the cytotoxicity by 51% (20 +/- 4% cytotoxicity, P less than 0.002). Furthermore, depletion of endogenously released adenosine from the medium by
adenosine deaminase
-enhanced injury to endothelial cells by stimulated neutrophils (from 39 +/- 4% to 69 +/- 3% cytotoxicity, P less than 0.001). Indeed, in the presence of
adenosine deaminase
, even unstimulated neutrophils injured endothelial cells (19 +/- 4% vs. 2 +/- 2% cytotoxicity, P less than 0.001). These data indicate that engagement of adenosine receptors prevents both the adhesion of neutrophils and the injury they cause to endothelial cells. Adenosine inhibits injury provoked not only by cells that have been stimulated by chemoattractants but also by unstimulated cells. Based on this model of acute vascular damage we suggest that adenosine is not only a potent vasodilator, but plays the additional role of protecting vascular endothelium from damage by neutrophils.
...
PMID:Adenosine: an endogenous inhibitor of neutrophil-mediated injury to endothelial cells. 374 37
An early event associated with neutrophil-dependent tissue damage involves the adhesion of neutrophils to the vascular endothelium and the subsequent release of oxygen-derived free radicals and granule constituents. Elevations in intracellular cAMP are known to inhibit free radical release but not lysosomal enzyme release. The role of cAMP in
FMLP
-induced neutrophil adhesion was examined in this study by using an in vitro model of neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesion.
FMLP
stimulated a time- and concentration-dependent increase in human neutrophil adhesion to HUVEC.
FMLP
-mediated adhesion was inhibited by a diverse group of cAMP modulators: forskolin, isoproterenol, phosphodiesterase IV inhibitors (rolipram and Ro 20-1724), but not phosphodiesterase III inhibitors (milrinone and bemoradan). Endogenous adenosine has previously been shown to mediate
FMLP
-induced increases in cAMP enhanced in the presence of Ro 20-1724. In this study,
adenosine deaminase
prevented the inhibitory effects observed with rolipram and Ro 20-1724, implicating endogenous adenosine as a co-modulator of inhibition.
FMLP
stimulated neutrophil shape change and the surface expression of the beta 2 integrins CD11b/CD18 and CD11a/CD18. Both these responses were inhibited by rolipram but not bemoradan. With the use of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'disulfonic acid, we showed that mobilization of the intracellular pool of CD11b/CD18 paralleled adhesion. We conclude that neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesion is attenuated by elevating neutrophil intracellular cAMP and that inhibition of neutrophil CD11b/CD18 surface expression by cAMP accounts for this observed inhibition of adhesion.
...
PMID:Inhibition of chemotactic peptide-induced neutrophil adhesion to vascular endothelium by cAMP modulators. 799 50
All nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit neutrophil aggregation (homotypic cell-cell adhesion) and do so without affecting expression of CD11b/CD18. Since the first step in acute inflammation is a critical interaction between neutrophils and the vascular endothelium (heterotypic cell-cell adhesion), we determined whether NSAIDs diminish the adherence of neutrophils to the endothelium. At antiinflammatory concentrations (0.5-5 mM) sodium salicylate, an NSAID that does not inhibit prostaglandin synthesis, inhibited stimulated but not unstimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells (IC50 < 1 mM, P < 0.00001). Salicylates have previously been shown to inhibit oxidative phosphorylation and, predictably, sodium salicylate inhibited oxidative phosphorylation, as evidenced by depletion of ATP stores (875 +/- 75 pmol/10(6) PMN, [2.92 +/- 0.25 mM]) in stimulated (
FMLP
, 0.1 microM) but not resting neutrophils treated with antiinflammatory doses of sodium salicylate (EC50 = 1 mM, P < 0.00001). Indomethacin and piroxicam (10 and 30 microM) only minimally decreased ATP concentrations in stimulated and resting neutrophils. ATP is metabolized to adenosine, and we have previously demonstrated that both endogenously released (180-200 nM) and exogenous adenosine (IC50 = 250 nM) inhibit stimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells. To determine whether the increased metabolism of ATP and the resultant increase in adenosine release were responsible for inhibition of neutrophil adhesion to endothelium, we determined whether addition of
adenosine deaminase
(ADA, 0.125 IU/ml), an enzyme that converts extracellular adenosine to its inactive metabolite, inosine, affected inhibition of neutrophil adhesion to endothelium by stimulated neutrophils. ADA significantly reversed inhibition of neutrophil adherence to endothelium by sodium salicylate (0.5-5 mM, P < 0.00001). This suggests that sodium salicylate inhibits neutrophil adherence by increasing adenosine release. Whereas indomethacin and piroxicam (10-50 microM) also inhibited stimulated neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells, ADA did not affect their inhibition of adherence. These studies demonstrate a heretofore unexpected antiinflammatory mechanism for salicylates: salicylates increase ATP hydrolysis and thereby enhance release of adenosine. Moreover, these data are consistent with the hypothesis that NSAIDs differ from one another with respect to their mechanisms of action.
...
PMID:Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents inhibit stimulated neutrophil adhesion to endothelium: adenosine dependent and independent mechanisms. 808 28
The anti-inflammatory mechanism of sulfasalazine is not well understood. It has recently been shown that sulfasalazine inhibits 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamidoribonucleotide (AICAR) transformylase, an enzyme involved in de novo purine biosynthesis. We recently demonstrated that methotrexate promotes intracellular AICAR accumulation, thereby increasing adenosine release and diminishing inflammation, so we tested the hypothesis that sulfasalazine similarly promotes intracellular AICAR accumulation. We studied adenosine release and the state of inflammation in in vitro and in vivo models of the inflammatory process. The adhesion of stimulated neutrophils (
FMLP
) to endothelial cells preincubated with sulfasalazine was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner. Elimination of extracellular adenosine by addition of
adenosine deaminase
or inhibition of adenosine by the adenosine A2 receptor antagonist 3,7-dimethyl-1-propargylxanthine (DMPX) completely reversed the anti-inflammatory effect of sulfasalazine (at concentrations <1 microM in this in vitro model. To determine whether this phenomenon was relevant to inhibition of inflammation in vivo, we studied the effect of sulfasalazine (100 mg/kg/day by gastric gavage for 3 days) on leukocyte accumulation in the murine air pouch model of inflammation. Treatment with sulfasalazine markedly decreased the number of leukocytes that accumulated in the inflamed (carrageenan, 2 mg/ml) air pouch. Injection of either
adenosine deaminase
or DMPX, but not the A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-dipropylxanthine, significantly reversed the anti-inflammatory effects of sulfasalazine treatment. Sulfasalazine increased the exudate adenosine concentration from 127 +/- 64 nM to 869 +/- 47 nM. Moreover, sulfasalazine treatment promoted a marked increase in splenocyte AICAR concentration from 35 +/- 6 to 96 +/- 3 pmols/10(6) splenocytes, which is consistent with the in vitro observation that sulfasalazine inhibits AICAR transformylase. These results indicate that sulfasalazine, like methotrexate, enhances adenosine release at an inflamed site and that adenosine diminishes inflammation via occupancy of A2 receptors on inflammatory cells. Our studies provide evidence that sulfasalazine and methotrexate may be described as a newly recognized family of anti-inflammatory agents that share the property of using adenosine as an antagonist of inflammation.
...
PMID:The anti-inflammatory mechanism of sulfasalazine is related to adenosine release at inflamed sites. 859 47