| Literature DB >> 11001562 |
Abstract
The enzymatic activities of acidic and neutral sphingomyelinases (aSMase and nSMase) in crude extracts of HL-60 cells prepared by short ultrasonic irradiation (sonicates) were characterized. It was found that although both have similar Km and Vmax (approximately 0.2 mM and approximately 3.5 nmol/mg per h, respectively), the two activities differ in many other aspects, including the following: (1) the aSMase activity has higher stability at 37 degrees C; (2) the aSMase is much less sensitive to Triton X-100 ( > 5 mM), compared with < or = 0.4 mM for the nSMase; (3) the nSMase, but not the aSMase, can discriminate between the natural bovine sphingomyelin substrate and the fluorescent substrate lissamine rhodamine dodecanoyl sphingosyl phosphocholine, suggesting that nSMase has higher substrate specificity. TNFalpha, which upon incubation with the HL-60 cells induces cellular SM hydrolysis, does not affect Km or Vmax of the nSMase in HL-60 sonicates. This suggests that TNFalpha may operate through translocation of either the enzyme or the substrate, thereby enhancing substrate availability and rate of hydrolysis, and not through enzyme activation. The relevance of these studies to the sphingomyelin cycle is discussed.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 11001562 DOI: 10.1016/s0009-3084(99)00076-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Phys Lipids ISSN: 0009-3084 Impact factor: 3.329