Data from the literature have demonstrated that synaptosomal preparations from various sources can hydrolyze externally added ATP. Various authors characterized this activity as an ecto-ATPase. In the present report, we demonstrate that synaptosomal preparations obtained from the cerebral cortex of rats show ATPase activity that could not be dissociated from ADPase activity, suggesting that an ATP-diphosphohydrolase is involved in ATP and ADP hydrolysis. Furthermore, the ATP and ADP hydrolysis could not be attributed to associations of enzymes that could mimic an ATP-diphosphohydrolase because none of the following activities were detected in our assay conditions inorganic pyrophosphatase, adenylate kinase, or nonspecific phosphatases. A possible association between an ATPase and an ADPase was excluded on the basis of both the kinetics and much additional data on inhibitors, ion dependence, pH, etc. The present results demonstrate that in synaptosomal preparations from cerebral cortex an ATP-diphosphohydrolase is involved, at least in part, in ATP and ADP hydrolysis.
Human platelets contain an ATP diphosphohydrolase activity (apyrase, EC 3.6.1.5) that is Ca(2+) dependent, hydrolyses ATP and ADP and also GTP, ITP, CTP, GDP, IDP, CDP. The enzyme does not hydrolyse AMP, p-nitrophenylphosphate, inorganic phosphate or glucose-6-phosphate. Contaminant activities were ruled out because the enzyme was not inhibited by 2 μg/d ouabain, 1.0 μM levamisole, 10 μM ApSA or 1.0 mM azide. The enzyme was sensitive to 100 μM orthovanadate, 100μMApSA and 10 mM azide, reagents that have been described as inhibitors of some other apyrases. A strong inhibition by 1.0 mM NEM was observed, indicating that sulphydryl groups are involved in the enzyme activity. The parallel behaviour of ATPase and ADPase activities and the competition plot presented suggest that ATP and ADP hydrolysis occurs at the same active site. ATP diphosphohydrolase from human platelets may be involved in the modulation of nucleotide concentration in the circulation and thus in vascular tonus.
Glioblastomas are the most common form of primary tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) and despite treatment, patients with these tumors have a very poor prognosis. ATP and other nucleotides and nucleosides are very important signaling molecule in physiological and pathological conditions in the CNS. ATP is degraded very slowly by gliomas when compared to astrocytes, potentially resulting in the accumulation of extracellular ATP around gliomas. Cell lysis caused by excitotoxic death or by tumor resection may liberate intracellular ATP, a known mitotic factor for glioma cells. The aim of this study is to examine the effects on cytotoxicity induced by extracellular ATP in U138-MG human glioma cell line and C6 rat glioma cell line compared to hippocampal organotypic cell cultures. The cytotoxicity of ATP (0.1, 0.5, 5 mM) was measured using propidium iodide and LDH assays. Caspases assay was performed to identify apoptotic cell death. Results showed that the glioma cells present resistance to death induced by ATP when compared with a normal tissue. High ATP concentrations (5 mM) induced cell death after 24 h in organotypic cell cultures but not in glioma cell lines. Our data indicate that ATP released in these situations can induce cell death of the normal tissue surrounding the tumor, potentially opening space to the fast growth and invasion of the tumor.
In the present report we describe an apyrase (ATP diphosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.5) in rat blood platelets. The enzyme hydrolyses almost identically quite different nucleoside di- and triphosphates. The calcium dependence and pH requirement were the same for the hydrolysis of ATP and ADP and the apparent Km values were similar for both Ca(2+)-ATP and Ca(2+)-ADP as substrates. Ca(2+)-ATP and Ca(2+)-ADP hydrolysis could not be attributed to the combined action of different enzymes because adenylate kinase, inorganic pyrophosphatase and nonspecific phosphatases were not detected under our assay conditions. The Ca(2+)-ATPase and Ca(2+)-ADPase activity was insensitive to ATPase, adenylate kinase and alkaline phosphatase classical inhibitors, thus excluding these enzymes as contaminants. The results demonstrate that rat blood platelets contain an ATP diphosphohydrolase involved in the hydrolysis of ATP and ADP which are vasoactive and platelet active adenine nucleotides.
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