Accessibility / Report Error

Catabolism of Ap4A and Ap5A by rat brain synaptosomes

Abstract

Adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P4-tetraphosphate (Ap4A) and adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P5-pentaphosphate (Ap5A) are stored in and released from rat brain synaptic terminals. In the present study we investigated the hydrolysis of dinucleotides (Ap4A and Ap5A) in synaptosomes from the cerebral cortex of adult rats. Ap4A and Ap5A, but not Ap3A, were hydrolyzed at pH 7.5 in the presence of 20 mM Tris/HCl, 2.0 mM MgCl2, 10 mM glucose and 225 mM sucrose at 37oC. The disappearance of the substrates measured by FPLC on a mono-Q HR column was both time and protein dependent. Since synaptosome integrity was at least 90% at the end of the assay, hydrolysis probably occurred by the action of an ecto-enzyme. Extracellular actions of adenine dinucleotides at central nervous system terminate due to the existence of ecto-nucleotidases which specifically cleave these dinucleotides. These enzymes in association with an ATP diphosphohydrolase and a 5'-nucleotidase are able to promote the complete hydrolysis of dinucleotides to adenosine in the synaptic cleft.

Ap4A; Ap5A; diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase; brain synaptosomes; ApnAase


Braz J Med Biol Res, December 1998, Volume 31(12) 1529-1532 (Short Communication)

Catabolism of Ap4A and Ap5A by rat brain synaptosomes

T. Emanuelli, C.D. Bonan, J.J.F. Sarkis and A.M.O. Battastini

Departamento de Bioquímica, Instituto de Ciências Básicas da Saúde, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil

Text

Abstract

References

Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes

Adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P4-tetraphosphate (Ap4A) and adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P5-pentaphosphate (Ap5A) are stored in and released from rat brain synaptic terminals. In the present study we investigated the hydrolysis of dinucleotides (Ap4A and Ap5A) in synaptosomes from the cerebral cortex of adult rats. Ap4A and Ap5A, but not Ap3A, were hydrolyzed at pH 7.5 in the presence of 20 mM Tris/HCl, 2.0 mM MgCl2, 10 mM glucose and 225 mM sucrose at 37oC. The disappearance of the substrates measured by FPLC on a mono-Q HR column was both time and protein dependent. Since synaptosome integrity was at least 90% at the end of the assay, hydrolysis probably occurred by the action of an ecto-enzyme. Extracellular actions of adenine dinucleotides at central nervous system terminate due to the existence of ecto-nucleotidases which specifically cleave these dinucleotides. These enzymes in association with an ATP diphosphohydrolase and a 5'-nucleotidase are able to promote the complete hydrolysis of dinucleotides to adenosine in the synaptic cleft.

Key words: Ap4A, Ap5A, diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase, brain synaptosomes, ApnAase

Adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P4-tetraphosphate (Ap4A) and adenosine 5',5'''-P1,P5-pentaphosphate (Ap5A) are stored in secretory granules of chromaffin cells (1) and in the rat brain synaptic terminals (2), being released in a calcium-dependent process (2). Furthermore, the presence of high-affinity receptors for diadenosine polyphosphates (ApnA) in neural tissues has been reported (3,4). Diadenosine polyphosphates are considered to be a new class of neurotransmitter substances and extracellular neural modulators (5-7). Thus, an enzyme able to hydrolyze extracellular dinucleotides may be a mechanism to control their life span and thus the duration and extent of receptor activation (5).

A diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase (ApnAase) has been described in chromaffin cells and the action of this enzyme together with an ecto-apyrase and an ecto-5'-nucleotidase can promote the complete extracellular hydrolysis of the dinucleotides Ap4A and Ap5A to adenosine (5,8,9). Recently, Mateo et al. (10) have shown a similar association of enzymes in the electric organ of Torpedo (peripheral nervous system). With respect to the central nervous system, previous studies have demonstrated that extracellular ATP is hydrolyzed to adenosine by the action of an ecto-ATP diphosphohydrolase (ecto-apyrase) and an ecto-5'-nucleotidase in intact synaptosomes from rat brain (11-13).

The aim of the present study was to demonstrate ecto-diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase activity (ecto-ApnAase) in synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats. The role of this enzyme activity in the purinergic system is discussed.

Adult male Wistar rats (230-250 g) from the local breeding colony were used. Rats were maintained on a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle in a constant temperature room. Synaptosomes were isolated as described by Nagy and Delgado-Escueta (14). Ecto-ApnA hydrolase activity was measured by the disappearance of ApnA (Ap3A, Ap4A and Ap5A) using the fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) system. Briefly, synaptosome fractions were incubated in 0.2 ml of a reaction mixture containing 20 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.5, 2.0 mM MgCl2, 10 mM glucose and 225 mM sucrose. After preincubation for 10 min at 37oC the reaction was started by the addition of 20 µl diadenosine polyphosphates to provide a final concentration of 100 µM in a final volume of 200 µl. The reaction was stopped by the addition of trichloroacetic acid to give a final concentration of 5%. Samples were chilled on ice and centrifuged at 14,000 g for 7 min. Samples of 50 µl were diluted ten times with deionized water and injected into a Mono Q HR 5/5 (1 ml) column from Pharmacia (Uppsala, Sweden). Elution buffers were filtered through HAW04700 Millipore membranes and degassed prior to use. Before use, the column was equilibrated at 1 ml/min with 50 mM H3PO4 buffer, pH 3.5, neutralized with NaOH. Nucleotides were detected by absorbance at 254 nm. For analytical purposes the Mono Q column was eluted with a linear gradient of 0.5 M H3PO4 (10-100%), pH 3.5, neutralized with NaOH, at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min. The retention times of all nucleotides were determined before sample analysis.

Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was assayed according to Keiding et al. (15). Synaptosome integrity was estimated by measuring the activity of the cytosolic enzyme LDH after incubation of the synaptosome fraction at 37oC at two different incubation times (0 and 80 min), and comparing it to the total enzyme activity in synaptosomes lyzed with 0.1% Triton X-100. The results are reported as percentage of LDH activity in the intact synaptosome fraction compared to the LDH activity in the lyzed synaptosomes (100%).

Protein content was determined by the method of Bradford (16), using bovine serum albumin as standard.

Synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats were able to hydrolyze the dinucleotides Ap4A and Ap5A. The reaction was monitored by determining the decrease of substrate in the reaction mixture by FPLC. The hydrolysis of Ap4A and Ap5A increased as a function of protein concentration and incubation time. The disappearance of both substrates was linear in the range 200 to 500 µg protein/ml in the incubation medium (Figure 1A,B). In another series of experiments we evaluated the rate of breakdown of both dinucleotides as a function of the time of incubation after the addition of a fixed protein amount (85 µg) (Figure 2A,B). The velocity was constant up to 80 min of reaction. It is noteworthy that the substrate Ap3A was not degraded by the synaptosomal fraction under our assay conditions.

Figure 1
- Ap4A (A) and Ap5A (B) hydrolysis as a function of synaptosome protein concentration. The assay mixture contained 20 mM Tris/HCl, pH 7.5, 2.0 mM MgCl2, 10 mM glucose and 225 mM sucrose in a final volume of 200 µl. The samples were incubated for 60 min at 37oC. The data are representative of three independent experiments with different synaptosome preparations.

Figure 2
- Ap4A (A) and Ap5A (B) hydrolysis by synaptosomes as a function of time. The enzyme assay was carried out as described in the Legend to Figure 1, with 85 µg protein/200 µl at 37oC. The data are representative of three independent experiments with different synaptosome preparations.

The integrity of the synaptosome fraction was determined by measuring intrasynaptosomal LDH activity (17). The LDH values indicated 10% synaptosome disruption in our preparation after 80 min of incubation. We conclude that the majority of the synaptosomes maintain their integrity during the assay and, therefore, that the degradation of Ap4A and Ap5A by synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats is probably due to an ecto-activity, which does not hydrolyze Ap3A.

Enzymes which hydrolyze ATP and ADP (ecto-apyrase) and AMP (ecto-5'-nucleotidase) have been fully characterized in the peripheral and central nervous systems (11-13,18). However, the enzyme ecto-diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase, which is able to degrade ApnA compounds, has been only recently studied (8-10). Since initial evidence for the presence of a diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase is the disappearance of Ap4A and Ap5A as a function of protein concentration and incubation time, the results presented here in Figures 1 and 2 indicate the existence of this enzyme activity in the central nervous system for the first time.

Another characteristic of this enzyme which was studied in the present investigation was its ecto-localization. Our results, together with other studies (8-11), suggest that the hydrolysis of ApnA to adenosine may occur by the sequential action of ectoenzymes involved in the extracellular degradation of nucleotides.

It will be of interest to extend our study to better characterize this enzyme activity and its possible participation in an enzyme chain together with an ecto-apyrase and an ecto-5'-nucleotidase to degrade the dinucleotides Ap5A and Ap4A to adenosine in the synaptic cleft.

1. Rodriguez del Castillo A, Torres M, Delicado EG & Miras-Portugal MT (1988). Subcellular distribution studies of diadenosine polyphosphates - Ap4A and Ap5A - in rat brain adrenal medulla: presence in chromaffin granules. Journal of Neurochemistry, 51: 1696-1703.

2. Pintor J, Diaz-Rey MA, Torres M & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Presence of diadenosine polyphosphates - Ap4A and Ap5A - in rat brain synaptic terminals: Ca+2-dependent release evoked by 4-aminopyridine and veratridine. Neuroscience Letters, 136: 141-144.

3. Miras-Portugal MT, Castro E, Mateo J & Pintor J (1996). The diadenosine polyphosphate receptors: P2D purinoceptors. In: Chadwick DJ & Goodee JA (Editors), P2 Purinoceptors: Localization, Function and Transduction Mechanisms. Ciba Foundation Symposium, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., West Sussex, England.

4. Rodriguez-Pascual F, Cortes R, Torres M, Palacios JM & Miras-Portugal MT (1997). Distribution of [3H]diadenosine tetraphosphate binding sites in rat brain. Neuroscience, 77: 247-255.

5. Ramos A, Pintor J, Miras-Portugal MT & Rotlán P (1995). Use of fluorogenic substrates for detection and investigation of ectoenzymatic hydrolysis of diadenosine polyphosphates: A fluorometric study on chromaffin cells. Analytical Biochemistry, 228: 74-82.

6. Pintor J & Miras-Portugal MT (1995). A novel receptor for diadenosine polyphosphates coupled to calcium increase in rat midbrain synaptosomes. British Journal of Pharmacology, 115: 895-902.

7. Pintor J, King BF, Miras-Portugal MT & Burnstock G (1996). Selectivity and activity of adenine dinucleotides at recombinant P2x2 and P2y1 purinoceptors. British Journal of Pharmacology, 119: 1006-1012.

8. Rodriguez-Pascual F, Torres M, Rotlán P & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Extracellular hydrolysis of diadenosine polyphosphates, ApnA, by bovine chromaffin cells in culture. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 297: 176-183.

9. Rodríguez-Pascual F, Torres M & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Studies on the turnover of ecto-nucleotidases and ecto-dinucleoside-polyphosphate hydrolase in cultured chromaffin cells. Neuroscience Research Communications, 11: 101-107.

10. Mateo J, Rotllán P, Marti E, Gomez De Aranda I, Solsona C & Miras-Portugal MT (1997). Diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase from presynaptic plasma membranes of Torpedo electric organ. Biochemical Journal, 323: 677-684.

11. Battastini AMO, Rocha JB, Barcelos CK, Dias RD & Sarkis JJF (1991). Characterization of an ATP diphosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.5) in synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats. Neurochemical Research, 16: 1303-1310.

12. Zimmermann H (1996). Extracellular purine metabolism. Drug Development Research, 39: 337-352.

13. Wang T-F, Rosenberg PA & Guidotti G (1997). Characterization of brain ecto-apyrase: evidence for only one ecto-apyrase (CD39) gene. Molecular Brain Research, 47: 295-302.

14. Nagy A & Delgado-Escueta AV (1984). Rapid preparation of synaptosomes from mammalian brain using nontoxic isoosmotic gradient material (Percoll). Journal of Neurochemistry, 43: 1114-1123.

15. Keiding R, Horder M & Gerhardt W (1974). Recommended methods for determination of four enzymes in blood. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical Laboratory Investigation, 33: 291-306.

16. Bradford MM (1976). A rapid and sensitive method for the quantification of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Analytical Biochemistry, 72: 218-254.

17. Johnson MK & Whittaker VP (1963). Lactate dehydrogenase as a cytoplasmic marker in brain. Biochemical Journal, 88: 404-409.

18. Sarkis JJF & Saltó C (1991). Characterization of a synaptosomal ATP diphosphohydrolase from the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata. Brain Research Bulletin, 26: 871-876.

Address for correspondence: J.J.F. Sarkis, Departamento de Bioquímica, Instituto de Ciências Básicas da Saúde, UFRGS, Rua Ramiro Barcelos, 2600, anexo, 90035-003 Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil. Fax: +55-51-316-5535. E-mail: jjsarkis@plug-in.com.br

Research supported by FINEP and CNPq. Received December 4, 1997. Accepted September 1, 1998.

  • 1. Rodriguez del Castillo A, Torres M, Delicado EG & Miras-Portugal MT (1988). Subcellular distribution studies of diadenosine polyphosphates - Ap4A and Ap5A - in rat brain adrenal medulla: presence in chromaffin granules. Journal of Neurochemistry, 51: 1696-1703.
  • 2. Pintor J, Diaz-Rey MA, Torres M & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Presence of diadenosine polyphosphates - Ap4A and Ap5A - in rat brain synaptic terminals: Ca+2-dependent release evoked by 4-aminopyridine and veratridine. Neuroscience Letters, 136: 141-144.
  • 5. Ramos A, Pintor J, Miras-Portugal MT & Rotlán P (1995). Use of fluorogenic substrates for detection and investigation of ectoenzymatic hydrolysis of diadenosine polyphosphates: A fluorometric study on chromaffin cells. Analytical Biochemistry, 228: 74-82.
  • 6. Pintor J & Miras-Portugal MT (1995). A novel receptor for diadenosine polyphosphates coupled to calcium increase in rat midbrain synaptosomes. British Journal of Pharmacology, 115: 895-902.
  • 7. Pintor J, King BF, Miras-Portugal MT & Burnstock G (1996). Selectivity and activity of adenine dinucleotides at recombinant P2x2 and P2y1 purinoceptors. British Journal of Pharmacology, 119: 1006-1012.
  • 8. Rodriguez-Pascual F, Torres M, Rotlán P & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Extracellular hydrolysis of diadenosine polyphosphates, ApnA, by bovine chromaffin cells in culture. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 297: 176-183.
  • 9. Rodríguez-Pascual F, Torres M & Miras-Portugal MT (1992). Studies on the turnover of ecto-nucleotidases and ecto-dinucleoside-polyphosphate hydrolase in cultured chromaffin cells. Neuroscience Research Communications, 11: 101-107.
  • 10. Mateo J, Rotllán P, Marti E, Gomez De Aranda I, Solsona C & Miras-Portugal MT (1997). Diadenosine polyphosphate hydrolase from presynaptic plasma membranes of Torpedo electric organ. Biochemical Journal, 323: 677-684.
  • 11. Battastini AMO, Rocha JB, Barcelos CK, Dias RD & Sarkis JJF (1991). Characterization of an ATP diphosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.5) in synaptosomes from cerebral cortex of adult rats. Neurochemical Research, 16: 1303-1310.
  • 12. Zimmermann H (1996). Extracellular purine metabolism. Drug Development Research, 39: 337-352.
  • 13. Wang T-F, Rosenberg PA & Guidotti G (1997). Characterization of brain ecto-apyrase: evidence for only one ecto-apyrase (CD39) gene. Molecular Brain Research, 47: 295-302.
  • 14. Nagy A & Delgado-Escueta AV (1984). Rapid preparation of synaptosomes from mammalian brain using nontoxic isoosmotic gradient material (Percoll). Journal of Neurochemistry, 43: 1114-1123.
  • 15. Keiding R, Horder M & Gerhardt W (1974). Recommended methods for determination of four enzymes in blood. Scandinavian Journal of Clinical Laboratory Investigation, 33: 291-306.
  • 16. Bradford MM (1976). A rapid and sensitive method for the quantification of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Analytical Biochemistry, 72: 218-254.
  • 17. Johnson MK & Whittaker VP (1963). Lactate dehydrogenase as a cytoplasmic marker in brain. Biochemical Journal, 88: 404-409.
  • 18. Sarkis JJF & Saltó C (1991). Characterization of a synaptosomal ATP diphosphohydrolase from the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata Brain Research Bulletin, 26: 871-876.
  • Correspondence and Footnotes

  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      08 Dec 1998
    • Date of issue
      Dec 1998

    History

    • Accepted
      01 Sept 1998
    • Received
      04 Dec 1997
    Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica Av. Bandeirantes, 3900, 14049-900 Ribeirão Preto SP Brazil, Tel. / Fax: +55 16 3315-9120 - Ribeirão Preto - SP - Brazil
    E-mail: bjournal@terra.com.br