| Literature DB >> 11087120 |
C A Hicks-Berger1, T L Kirley.
Abstract
Human ecto-ATPase (ecto-nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase 2 [eNTPDase2], also known as CD39L1) has been expressed and characterized in COS cells. It exhibits some unusual enzymology that is similar to a few members of this class of proteins but different from the majority of the family members. Hydrolysis of ATP by human ecto-ATPase is nonlinear with time, and its activity is stimulated/stabilized by both the lectin concanavalin A and the chemical cross-linking agent disuccinimidyl suberate. Like other members of the eNTPDase family, the human ecto-ATPase is a tetramer, the activity of which depends on its glycosylation. Chimeras of this protein with human CD39 (eNTPDasel) were constructed to test the hypothesis that the N-terminal half of these proteins regulates nucleotide specificity. The two chimeras generated demonstrated that the N-terminal half of these proteins is crucial for determining the relative activities of the nucleoside di- and triphosphatases. Chemical cross-linking of the two chimeras suggests that disuccinimidyl suberate interacts with the C-terminal half of ecto-ATPase in a manner that results in an increase of activity for both the ecto-ATPase and the ecto-apyrase/ecto-ATPase chimera.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 11087120 DOI: 10.1080/15216540050176584
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUBMB Life ISSN: 1521-6543 Impact factor: 3.885