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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)
Mast cells release histamine and other mediators of allergy in response to stimulation of their IgE receptors. This release is generally thought to be mediated by an elevation of cytosolic
Ca2+
. Recent evidence suggests that there might be factors that modulate the coupling between
Ca2+
levels and mediator release. The present report identifies adenosine as one such modulator. Adenosine and several of its metabolically stable analogues were shown to enhance histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells in response to stimuli such as concanavalin A. Metabolizing endogenous adenosine with
adenosine deaminase
dampened the response to stimuli, whereas trapping endogenous adenosine inside mast cells with nucleoside-transport inhibitors markedly enhanced stimulated histamine release. The metabolically stable adenosine analogue 5'-(N-ethylcarboxamido)adenosine (NECA) did not affect the initial steps in the sequence from IgE-receptor activation to mediator release, which are generation of inositol trisphosphate and increase of cytosolic
Ca2+
. However, NECA did enhance the release induced in ATP-permeabilized cells by exogenous
Ca2+
, but it had no effect on the release induced by phorbol esters. These data suggest that adenosine sensitizes mediator release by a mechanism regulating stimulus-secretion coupling at a step distal to receptor activation and second-messenger generation.
...
PMID:Adenosine regulates the Ca2+ sensitivity of mast cell mediator release. 246 58
Micromolar concentrations of adenosine were found to potentiate the release of histamine and leukotriene C4 (LTC4) from immunologically activated human lung mast cells (HLMC). Structurally modified congeners of adenosine including 5'-N-ethylcarboxamideadenosine (NECA) and R-phenylisopropyladenosine (R-PIA) also potentiated mediator release. A rank order of potency was established where NECA greater than R-PIA for the potentiation of both LTC4 production and histamine secretion. Mast cells isolated by either enzymatic or mechanical means from human lung parenchyma were both similarly responsive to the modulatory effects of adenosine and analogues, and the potency series of NECA greater than R-PIA also applied. Moreover, histamine release induced by the
calcium
ionophore A23187 was augmented by NECA, R-PIA, and adenosine and in that potency order. Dipyridamole, an agent thought to impede the intracellular uptake of adenosine, failed to reverse the nucleoside's enhancement of IgE-mediated secretion. The irreversible inhibitor of
adenosine deaminase
, deoxycoformycin, did not modify the adenosine enhancement of stimulated secretion. Low concentrations of methylxanthines, which antagonize responses mediated at cell surface adenosine receptors, were inconsistent in their effects. Theophylline modestly reversed the adenosine-induced potentiation of IgE-mediated LTC4 generation but not histamine release. Studies employing 8-phenyltheophylline were complicated by the methylxanthine possessing inhibitory properties of its own at concentrations expected to antagonize a nucleoside-mediated effect. In total, these results suggest that the response of HLMC to adenosine describes properties most consistent with an A2/Ra-like process, although an interaction via an, as yet, uncharacterized cell surface receptor cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Adenosine potentiates mediator release from human lung mast cells. 246 85
A potential physiologic role of extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) on platelet function is proposed in this report. It is widely accepted that ATP competitively inhibits adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-induced platelet aggregation. Our observations of platelet aggregation with the agonists, collagen, epinephrine, and ADP in the presence of 180 mumol/L ATP could support this competitive nature of ATP. However, the disaggregation of maximally aggregated platelets induced by ATP, theophylline, or ATP plus theophylline indicates that additional mechanisms of ATP action may be present. Extracellular gamma-32P-ATP (7 pmol) labels surface-membrane proteins in intact platelets as demonstrated by several criteria. The reaction is Ca++-dependent. Stimulation by
calcium
occurs in the physiologic range of 1 to 5 mmol/L. Significant levels of phosphorylation occur within one minute with near maximal levels reached by five minutes. Platelet cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels were elevated in a dose-dependent fashion in cells incubated for four minutes with increasing amounts of extracellular ATP (18 to 540 nmol). The addition of ATP plus theophylline resulted in a synergistic stimulation of cAMP levels. ATP was not being hydrolyzed to adenosine by plasma nucleotidases, as demonstrated by the lack of effect of ten U of
adenosine deaminase
. The phosphorylation of surface proteins by extracellular ATP released from activated platelets may modulate platelet responsiveness to agonists at distances removed from the site of vascular injury. Phosphorylation may also play a role in signal transduction to regulate the levels of intracellular cAMP, which further inhibits platelet activation.
...
PMID:Modulation of platelet function by extracellular adenosine triphosphate. 254 37
We have examined the effects of R-phenylisopropyladenosine (R-PIA) and other adenosine analogues on basal, prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)- and forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP (cAMP) formation in intact N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells, to determine whether the cells contain A1 adenosine receptors that are negatively coupled with adenylate cyclase. Basal levels of cAMP (68 +/- 7 pmol/mg protein; mean +/- SE, N = 15) were not altered by low concentrations of R-PIA. The apparent lack of inhibition was not due to increases in cAMP due to activation of a stimulatory A2 receptor by endogenously-synthesized adenosine. By comparison, low levels of R-PIA did reduce significantly (P less than 0.05) PGE1-dependent increases in cAMP formation (maximum response to PGE1, 972 +/- 77 pmol cAMP/mg protein; EC50 for PGE1, 0.2 microM). Inhibition was dose dependent, and resulted in a 30-50% maximum reduction in production stimulated by PGE1. Nanomolar concentrations of R-PIA elicited half-maximal inhibition; the inhibitory response was blocked by 8-phenyltheophylline (8-PT). The order of potencies of several adenosine analogues in eliciting this response suggested that inhibition was mediated by an A1 adenosine receptor. Examination of the effects of R-PIA on forskolin-stimulated cAMP formation yielded several interesting findings. First, stimulation by the diterpene by itself was blocked by both
adenosine deaminase
(
ADA
) and 8-PT (40 and 25% inhibition respectively). Low concentrations of R-PIA (less than 10(-6) M) had no effect on forskolin-stimulated cAMP production. At higher levels (greater than or equal to 10(-6) M) the analogues acted synergistically with the diterpene, to yield cAMP levels that were up to 3-fold higher than the additive effect of the two agents. Potentiation was stereospecific,
Ca2+
dependent, and was blocked by 8-PT. The results of this study suggest that, in N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells, inhibitory A1 receptors are not stimulated in response to non-specific elevations in cAMP, but are associated with specific stimulatory receptors such as those activated by PGE1.
...
PMID:Effects of adenosine analogues on basal, prostaglandin E1- and forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP formation in intact neuroblastoma cells. 255 19
Ischaemia rapidly increases the concentration of cAMP in the brain by mechanism(s) which still remain undefined. In the present study significant enhancement of cAMP generation was found in vitro after brain ischaemia induced by decapitation or cardiac arrest. The particulate fraction from ischaemic brain accumulated considerably more cAMP and responded more effectively to stimulation by noradrenaline (NE), histamine (Hi) and adenosine than that prepared from normoxic controls. The most pronounced effect was observed immediately after ischaemic insult and proceeded to normalize during 24 hours of postischaemic recovery. The activation of cAMP production by NE and Hi, but not 2-chloradenosine (2-CA), was totally dependent on the presence of endogenous adenosine and
calcium
. The synergism of 2-CA with NE or Hi on cAMP accumulation was observed. Its disappearance after
adenosine deaminase
treatment indicates that the postischaemic activation of adenosine A2 receptors may be positively modulated by NE and Hi. These results strongly suggest that primary functional changes in the cell-membrane signalling system had been induced by the ischaemic insult.
...
PMID:Rapid enhancement of cAMP accumulation in rat brain particulate fraction after ischaemia. 255 46
We compared the response of rat PC12 cells and a derivative PC18 cell line to the effects of adenosine receptor agonists, antagonists, and adenine nucleotide metabolizing enzymes. We found that theophylline (an adenosine receptor antagonist),
adenosine deaminase
, and AMP deaminase all decreased basal cyclic AMP content and tyrosine hydroxylase activity in the PC12 cells, but not in PC18 cells. Both cell lines responded to the addition of 2-chloroadenosine and 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine, adenosine receptor agonists, by exhibiting an increase in tyrosine hydroxylase activity and cyclic AMP content. The latter finding indicates that both cell lines contained an adenosine receptor linked to adenylate cyclase. We found that the addition of dipyridamole, an inhibitor of adenosine uptake, produced an elevation of cyclic AMP and tyrosine hydroxylase activity in both cell lines. Deoxycoformycin, an inhibitor of
adenosine deaminase
, failed to alter the levels of cyclic AMP or tyrosine hydroxylase activity. This suggests that uptake was the primary inactivating mechanism of adenosine action in these cells. We conclude that both cell types generated adenine nucleotides which activate the adenosine receptor in an autocrine or paracrine fashion. We found that PC12 cells released ATP in a
calcium
-dependent process in response to activation of the nicotinic receptor. We also measured the rates of degradation of exogenous ATP, ADP, and AMP by PC12 cells. We found that the rates of metabolism of the former two were at least an order of magnitude greater than that of AMP. Any released ATP would be rapidly metabolized to AMP and then more slowly degraded to adenosine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Adenosine receptor activation and the regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase activity in PC12 and PC18 cells. 257 81
Adenosine has been proposed as a metabolic factor involved in the regulation of cerebral blood flow. The evidence in support of this hypothesis, presented in this review, includes information on the adenosine receptors associated with cerebral blood vessels, the synthesis and metabolism of adenosine, and the release of adenosine from the brain. Adenosine dilates cerebral blood vessels, acting at an A2 receptor. The critical evidence implicating an involvement of adenosine in cerebrovascular regulation is derived from experiments with adenosine antagonists and potentiators. The antagonists include methylxanthine adenosine receptor antagonists and the enzyme
adenosine deaminase
. Potentiators include transport inhibitors, enzyme inhibitors, and adenosine precursors. Adenosine has been implicated in vascular regulation during hypoxia/ischemia, hypercapnia, seizures, severe hypotension, and hypoglycemia. Adenosine possesses a number of properties that can be used to minimize neuronal degeneration during cerebral insults, such as ischemia, including vasodilatation, reduction of excitatory transmitter release, reduction of membrane
calcium
permeability, inhibition of platelets, and neutrophil aggregation. Several recent studies have demonstrated that manipulation of central adenosine tone can alter the extent of cerebral ischemic damage, indicating a potential new therapeutic approach for the treatment of stroke.
...
PMID:Adenosine in the control of the cerebral circulation. 270 69
The effects of ethanol and adenosine receptor agonist R-PIA and antagonist theophylline on release of endogenous glutamate were tested in rat cerebellar synaptosomal preparation. Release was carried out for 5 to 60 sec after which time the released glutamate was separated from the synaptosomal membranes by rapid filtration. The amount of released glutamate in the filtrate was measured by an enzyme-linked fluorometric assay. Basal endogenous glutamate release was estimated as 3.7 +/- 0.3 nmol/mg protein/5 sec and was stimulated by high K+. Glutamate release consisted of an initial rapid phase for the first 10 sec that was followed by a relatively slower phase. Both
Ca2+
-dependent and
Ca2+
-independent glutamate release were observed which suggested the involvement of both neuronal and glial constituents of the synaptosomal preparation, respectively. Pharmacologically relevant concentrations of ethanol (25-100 mM) caused a trend toward a dose-dependent inhibition of glutamate release. R-PIA and theophylline inhibited and stimulated, respectively, basal release of glutamate and R-PIA-inhibited release was blocked by theophylline. Ethanol (25 mM) blocked the stimulatory effect of theophylline and the results of experiments following the inclusion of
adenosine deaminase
suggested the involvement of adenosine in this effect of ethanol. The results support our previous findings that suggest an involvement of cerebellar adenosine in the motor disturbing effects of acute ethanol and extend those findings by indicating that ethanol inhibits glutamate release from granule cells of the cerebellar cortex through an adenosine-sensitive mechanism.
...
PMID:Release of endogenous glutamate from rat cerebellar synaptosomes: interactions with adenosine and ethanol. 273 44
1. The effects of purinergic stimulation on action potential, force of contraction, 86Rb efflux and 45Ca uptake were investigated in guinea-pig left atria. 2. Adenosine exerted a negative inotropic effect which was antagonized by
adenosine deaminase
but enhanced by dipyridamole. 3. The negative inotropic effect of adenosine was mimicked by 5'-(N-ethyl)-carboxamido-adenosine (NECA) and the isomers of N6-(phenyl-isopropyl)-adenosine, R-PIA and S-PIA. NECA and R-PIA were about 100 times more potent than adenosine, whereas R-PIA was about 100 times more potent than S-PIA. 4. The inotropic effects of adenosine (in the presence of dipyridamole), NECA, R-PIA and S-PIA were competitively antagonized either by theophylline (pA2 about 4.5) or 8-phenyltheophylline (pA2 about 6.3). 5. NECA and R-PIA shortened the action potential duration and increased the rate constant of the efflux of 86Rb in a concentration-dependent manner with no differences in potency; the effects were competitively antagonized by 8-phenyltheophylline. 6. Barium ions reduced the efflux of 86Rb under control conditions and antagonized the increase induced by NECA and R-PIA. 7. NECA and R-PIA significantly reduced 45Ca uptake in beating preparations. 8. It is concluded that adenosine, NECA and R-PIA activate a common receptor population (P1 or A3) on the outside of the cell membrane of atrial heart muscle to increase the potassium conductance and to reduce the action potential and, thereby,
calcium
influx and force of contraction.
...
PMID:Characterization of adenosine receptors in guinea-pig isolated left atria. 279 Mar 80
The histamine-stimulated accumulation of [3H]cAMP (formed by prelabeling with [3H]adenine) was characterized pharmacologically in a vesicular preparation of guinea pig cortex. The H2 antagonist cimetidine maximally blocked 80% of the response, whereas only 45% of the response could be inhibited by H1 antagonists. A combination of H1 and H2 antagonists completely abolished the response. These and other findings show that both H1 and H2 receptors mediate the response, but 25% of the response may require simultaneous activation of both receptors. A role for adenosine as a mediator of the histamine response was investigated. Adenosine deaminase (
EC 3.5.4.4
., 2.5 units/ml) decreased basal [3H]cAMP levels, abolished the cimetidine-resistant component of the histamine response, and reduced maximal H1 antagonism of the histamine response to 30%. Treatment with a combination of
adenosine deaminase
and the
calcium
chelator EGTA (2 mM) appeared to eliminate the H1 component completely. Under these latter conditions only H2 receptors appeared to mediate the histamine response. Thus, both H1 and H2 receptors stimulate [3H]cAMP accumulation in the vesicular preparation, but the H1 response seems to require either concomitant adenosine or H2 receptor stimulation and may be
calcium
dependent. These findings differ from those found in broken cell membrane preparations, where only H2 receptors appear to be coupled to adenylate cyclase activation.
...
PMID:Histamine receptors coupled to [3H]cAMP accumulation in brain: pharmacological characterization in a vesicular preparation of guinea pig cortex. 282 98
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