Purification of the blood vessel ATP diphosphohydrolase, identification and localisation by immunological techniques

1997 
Abstract ATP diphosphohydrolase (ATPDase) or apyrase (EC 3.6.1.5), an enzyme that hydrolyses the γ and β phosphate residues of triphospho- and diphosphonucleosides, has been purified from the bovine aorta media. A particulate fraction was isolated by differential, and sucrose cushion centrifugations, producing a 33-fold enrichment in ADPase activity. Solubilization of the enzyme from the particulate fraction with Triton X-100 caused a partial loss of activity. The solubilized enzyme was purified by DEAE-agarose, Affi-Gel blue and Concanavalin A column chromatographies yielding an additional 138-fold enrichment of the enzyme. The enzyme preparation was further purified by PAGE under non-denaturing conditions, followed by its detection on the gel. The active band was cut out and separated by SDS/PAGE. Overstaining with silver nitrate revealed a single band corresponding to a molecular mass of 78 000. Presence of an ATP binding site on the latter protein was demonstrated by labelling with 5′- p -fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA), an analogue of ATP, followed by its detection by a Western blot technique. Labelling specificity was demonstrated by competition experiments with Ca-ATP and Ca-ADP. An antiserum directed against the N-terminal sequence of the pig pancreas ATPDase (54 kDa) cross-reacted with the bovine aorta ATPDase at 78 kDa. Digestion of the ATPDase with N -glycosidase F caused a marked shift of the molecular mass, thereby showing multiple N -oligosaccharide chains. Immunohistochemical localisation confirmed the presence of ATPDase on both endothelial and smooth muscle cells.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    54
    References
    91
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []