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    Eur J Biochem. 1995 Nov 15;234(1):66-74.

    Purification and properties of human placental ATP diphosphohydrolase.

    Source

    Laboratory of Biological Chemistry, University of Ioannina Medical School, Greece.

    Abstract

    ATP diphosphohydrolase activity (ATP-DPH) has been previously identified in the particulate fraction of human term placenta [Papamarcaki, T. & Tsolas, O. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 97, 1-8]. In the present study we have purified to homogeneity and characterized this activity. A 260-fold purification has been obtained by solubilization of the particulate fraction and subsequent chromatography on DEAE Sepharose CL-6B and 5'-AMP Sepharose 4B. The preparation has been shown to be free of alkaline phosphatase even though the placental extract is rich in this activity. The purified enzyme is a glycoprotein and migrates as a single broad band of 82 kDa on SDS/PAGE. The same band is obtained after photoaffinity labeling of the enzyme with 8-azido-[alpha-32P]ATP. The enzyme has a broad substrate specificity, hydrolyzing triphosphonucleosides and diphosphonucleosides but not monophosphonucleosides or other phosphate esters. The activity is dependent on the addition of divalent cations Ca2+ or Mg2+. The Km values for ATP and ADP were determined to be 10 microM and 20 microM, respectively. Maximum activity was found at pH 7.0-7.5 with ATP as substrate, and pH 7.5-8.0 with ADP. The enzymic activity is inhibited by NaN3, NaF, adenosine 5'-[beta,gamma-imido]triphosphate and adenosine 5'-[alpha,beta-methylene]triphosphate. Protein sequence analysis showed ATP-DPH to be N-terminally blocked. Partial internal amino acid sequence information was obtained after chymotryptic cleavage and identified a unique sequence with no significant similarity to known proteins. ATP-DPH activity has been reported to be implicated in the prevention of platelet aggregation, hydrolysing ADP to AMP and thus preventing blood clotting.

    PMID:
    8529670
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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