- Browse by Subject
Browsing by Subject "Adenosine"
Now showing 1 - 10 of 11
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Adenosinergic regulation of binge-like ethanol drinking and associated locomotor effects in male C57BL/6J mice(Elsevier, 2015-08) Fritz, Brandon M.; Boehm II, Stephen L.; Department of Psychology, School of ScienceWe recently observed that the addition of caffeine (a nonselective adenosine receptor antagonist) to a 20% ethanol solution significantly altered the intoxication profile of male C57BL/6J (B6) mice induced by voluntary binge-like consumption in the 'Drinking-in-the-Dark' (DID) paradigm. In the current study, the roles of A1 and A2A adenosine receptor subtypes, specifically, in binge-like ethanol consumption and associated locomotor effects were explored. Adult male B6 mice (PND 60-70) were allowed to consume 20% ethanol (v/v) or 2% sucrose (w/v) for 6days via DID. On day 7, mice received a systemic administration (i.p.) of the A1 antagonist DPCPX (1, 3, 6mg/kg), the A2A antagonist MSX-3 (1, 2, 4mg/kg), or vehicle immediately prior to fluid access in DID. Antagonism of the A1 receptor via DPCPX was found to dose-dependently decrease binge-like ethanol intake and associated blood ethanol concentrations (p's<0.05), although no effect was observed on sucrose intake. Antagonism of A2A had no effect on ethanol or sucrose consumption, however, MSX-3 elicited robust locomotor stimulation in mice consuming either solution (p's<0.05). Together, these findings suggest unique roles for the A1 and A2A adenosine receptor subtypes in binge-like ethanol intake and its associated locomotor effects.Item Engineered natural killer cells impede the immunometabolic CD73-adenosine axis in solid tumors(eLife Sciences, 2022-07-11) Chambers, Andrea M.; Lupo, Kyle B.; Wang, Jiao; Cao, Jingming; Utturkar, Sagar; Lanman, Nadia; Bernal-Crespo, Victor; Jalal, Shadia; Pine, Sharon R.; Torregrosa-Allen, Sandra; Elzey, Bennett D.; Matosevic, Sandro; Medicine, School of MedicineImmunometabolic reprogramming due to adenosine produced by CD73 (encoded by the 5'-ectonucleotidase gene NT5E) is a recognized immunosuppressive mechanism contributing to immune evasion in solid tumors. Adenosine is not only known to contribute to tumor progression, but it has specific roles in driving dysfunction of immune cells, including natural killer (NK) cells. Here, we engineered human NK cells to directly target the CD73-adenosine axis by blocking the enzymatic activity of CD73. In doing so, the engineered NK cells not only impaired adenosinergic metabolism driven by the hypoxic uptake of ATP by cancer cells in a model of non-small-cell lung cancer, but also mediated killing of tumor cells due to the specific recognition of overexpressed CD73. This resulted in a 'single agent' immunotherapy that combines antibody specificity, blockade of purinergic signaling, and killing of targets mediated by NK cells. We also showed that CD73-targeted NK cells are potent in vivo and result in tumor arrest, while promoting NK cell infiltration into CD73+ tumors and enhancing intratumoral activation.Item Functional expression of CD73 on human natural killer cells(Springer, 2022) Chambers, Andrea M.; Wang, Jiao; Dao, Tram N.; Lupo, Kyle B.; Veenhuis, Paige; Ayers, Mitchell G.; Slivova, Veronika; Cohen‑Gadol, Aaron A.; Matosevic, Sandro; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineThe production of adenosine by CD73 on cancer cells in the tumor microenvironment is a recognized immunosuppressive mechanism contributing to immune evasion in many solid tumors. While NK cells have been purported to overexpress CD73 under certain conditions, this phenomenon has remained elusive and unclear. We have found that while NK cells are able to upregulate expression of CD73 on their surface when exposed to CD73+ cancer cells, this upregulation is not universal, nor is it often substantial. Rather, our data point to the extent of CD73 expression on NK cells to be both cancer-specific and environmentally-driven, and largely limited in intensity. We found that NK cell overexpression of CD73 responds to the level of CD73 on cancer cells and is enhanced in hypoxia. Interestingly, human CD73+ NK cells appear hyperfunctional in vitro compared to CD73- NK cells, suggesting that CD73 expression could be a bystander of NK cell activation. In addition, glioblastoma patient data show that tumor-infiltrating NK cells express CD73 variably, depending on donor, and present lower expression of CD16, alongside patient-specific changes in CEACAM1, CXCR3 and TIM-3, suggesting some functional changes in NK cell responses associated with expression of CD73 on NK cells in vivo. Taken together, our study is the first to show that while NK cells are largely resistant to the upregulation of CD73, CD73 expression is inducible on NK cells in response to CD73 on cancer cells, and these cells are associated with distinct functional signatures.Item Functional expression of CD73 on human natural killer cells(Springer, 2022-12) Chambers, Andrea M.; Wang, Jiao; Dao, Tram N.; Lupo, Kyle B.; Veenhuis, Paige; Ayers, Mitchell G.; Slivova, Veronika; Cohen-Gadol, Aaron A.; Matosevic, Sandro; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineThe production of adenosine by CD73 on cancer cells in the tumor microenvironment is a recognized immunosuppressive mechanism contributing to immune evasion in many solid tumors. While NK cells have been purported to overexpress CD73 under certain conditions, this phenomenon has remained elusive and unclear. We have found that while NK cells are able to upregulate expression of CD73 on their surface when exposed to CD73+ cancer cells, this upregulation is not universal, nor is it often substantial. Rather, our data point to the extent of CD73 expression on NK cells to be both cancer-specific and environmentally-driven, and largely limited in intensity. We found that NK cell overexpression of CD73 responds to the level of CD73 on cancer cells and is enhanced in hypoxia. Interestingly, human CD73+ NK cells appear hyperfunctional in vitro compared to CD73− NK cells, suggesting that CD73 expression could be a bystander of NK cell activation. In addition, glioblastoma patient data show that tumor-infiltrating NK cells express CD73 variably, depending on donor, and present lower expression of CD16, alongside patient-specific changes in CEACAM1, CXCR3 and TIM-3, suggesting some functional changes in NK cell responses associated with expression of CD73 on NK cells in vivo. Taken together, our study is the first to show that while NK cells are largely resistant to the upregulation of CD73, CD73 expression is inducible on NK cells in response to CD73 on cancer cells, and these cells are associated with distinct functional signatures.Item Functional expression of CD73 on human natural killer cells(Springer, 2022) Chambers, Andrea M.; Wang, Jiao; Dao, Tram N.; Lupo, Kyle B.; Veenhuis, Paige; Ayers, Mitchell G.; Slivova, Veronika; Cohen‑Gadol, Aaron A.; Matosevic, Sandro; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineThe production of adenosine by CD73 on cancer cells in the tumor microenvironment is a recognized immunosuppressive mechanism contributing to immune evasion in many solid tumors. While NK cells have been purported to overexpress CD73 under certain conditions, this phenomenon has remained elusive and unclear. We have found that while NK cells are able to upregulate expression of CD73 on their surface when exposed to CD73+ cancer cells, this upregulation is not universal, nor is it often substantial. Rather, our data point to the extent of CD73 expression on NK cells to be both cancer-specific and environmentally-driven, and largely limited in intensity. We found that NK cell overexpression of CD73 responds to the level of CD73 on cancer cells and is enhanced in hypoxia. Interestingly, human CD73+ NK cells appear hyperfunctional in vitro compared to CD73− NK cells, suggesting that CD73 expression could be a bystander of NK cell activation. In addition, glioblastoma patient data show that tumor-infiltrating NK cells express CD73 variably, depending on donor, and present lower expression of CD16, alongside patient-specific changes in CEACAM1, CXCR3 and TIM-3, suggesting some functional changes in NK cell responses associated with expression of CD73 on NK cells in vivo. Taken together, our study is the first to show that while NK cells are largely resistant to the upregulation of CD73, CD73 expression is inducible on NK cells in response to CD73 on cancer cells, and these cells are associated with distinct functional signatures.Item Human Recombinant Alkaline Phosphatase (Ilofotase Alfa) Protects Against Kidney Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Mice and Rats Through Adenosine Receptors(Frontiers Media, 2022-07-28) Rosin, Diane L.; Hall, J. Perry; Zheng, Shuqiu; Huang, Liping; Campos-Bilderback, Silvia; Sandoval, Ruben; Bree, Andrea; Beaumont, Kevin; Miller, Emily; Larsen, Jennifer; Hariri, Ghazal; Kaila, Neelu; Encarnacion, Iain M.; Gale, Jeremy D.; van Elsas, Andrea; Molitoris, Bruce A.; Okusa, Mark D.; Medicine, School of MedicineAdenosine triphosphate (ATP) released from injured or dying cells is a potent pro-inflammatory "danger" signal. Alkaline phosphatase (AP), an endogenous enzyme that de-phosphorylates extracellular ATP, likely plays an anti-inflammatory role in immune responses. We hypothesized that ilofotase alfa, a human recombinant AP, protects kidneys from ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), a model of acute kidney injury (AKI), by metabolizing extracellular ATP to adenosine, which is known to activate adenosine receptors. Ilofotase alfa (iv) with or without ZM241,385 (sc), a selective adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) antagonist, was administered 1 h before bilateral IRI in WT, A2AR KO (Adora2a-/- ) or CD73-/- mice. In additional studies recombinant alkaline phosphatase was given after IRI. In an AKI-on-chronic kidney disease (CKD) ischemic rat model, ilofotase alfa was given after the three instances of IRI and rats were followed for 56 days. Ilofotase alfa in a dose dependent manner decreased IRI in WT mice, an effect prevented by ZM241,385 and partially prevented in Adora2a-/- mice. Enzymatically inactive ilofotase alfa was not protective. Ilofotase alfa rescued CD73-/- mice, which lack a 5'-ectonucleotidase that dephosphorylates AMP to adenosine; ZM241,385 inhibited that protection. In both rats and mice ilofotase alfa ameliorated IRI when administered after injury, thus providing relevance for therapeutic dosing of ilofotase alfa following established AKI. In an AKI-on-CKD ischemic rat model, ilofotase alfa given after the third instance of IRI reduced injury. These results suggest that ilofotase alfa promotes production of adenosine from liberated ATP in injured kidney tissue, thereby amplifying endogenous mechanisms that can reverse tissue injury, in part through A2AR-and non-A2AR-dependent signaling pathways.Item Insight into the structures of unusual base pairs in RNA complexes containing a primer/template/adenosine ligand(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2023-08-30) Dantsu, Yuliya; Zhang, Ying; Zhang, Wen; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineIn the prebiotic RNA world, the self-replication of RNA without enzymes can be achieved through the utilization of 2-aminoimidazole activated nucleotides as efficient substrates. The mechanism of RNA nonenzymatic polymerization has been extensively investigated biophysically and structurally by using the model of an RNA primer/template complex which is bound by the imidazolium-bridged or triphosphate-bridged diguanosine intermediate. However, beyond the realm of the guanosine substrate, the structural insight into how alternative activated nucleotides bind and interact with the RNA primer/template complex remains unexplored, which is important for understanding the low reactivity of adenosine and uridine substrates in RNA primer extension, as well as its relationship with the structures. Here we use crystallography as a method and determine a series of high-resolution structures of RNA primer/template complexes bound by ApppG, a close analog of the dinucleotide intermediate containing adenosine and guanosine. The structures show that ApppG ligands bind to the RNA template through both Watson-Crick and noncanonical base pairs, with the primer 3'-OH group far from the adjacent phosphorus atom of the incoming substrate. The structures indicate that when adenosine is included in the imidazolium-bridged intermediate, the complexes are likely preorganized in a suboptimal conformation, making it difficult for the primer to in-line attack the substrate. Moreover, by co-crystallizing the RNA primer/template with chemically activated adenosine and guanosine monomers, we successfully observe the slow formation of the imidazolium-bridged intermediate (Ap-AI-pG) and the preorganized structure for RNA primer extension. Overall, our studies offer a structural explanation for the slow rate of RNA primer extension when using adenosine-5'-phosphoro-2-aminoimidazolide as a substrate during nonenzymatic polymerization.Item Profiling neural editomes reveals a molecular mechanism to regulate RNA editing during development(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2021-01) Rajendren, Suba; Dhakal, Alfa; Vadlamani, Pranathi; Townsend, Jack; Deffit, Sarah N.; Hundley, Heather A.; Biology, School of ScienceAdenosine (A) to inosine (I) RNA editing contributes to transcript diversity and modulates gene expression in a dynamic, cell type-specific manner. During mammalian brain development, editing of specific adenosines increases, whereas the expression of A-to-I editing enzymes remains unchanged, suggesting molecular mechanisms that mediate spatiotemporal regulation of RNA editing exist. Herein, by using a combination of biochemical and genomic approaches, we uncover a molecular mechanism that regulates RNA editing in a neural- and development-specific manner. Comparing editomes during development led to the identification of neural transcripts that were edited only in one life stage. The stage-specific editing is largely regulated by differential gene expression during neural development. Proper expression of nearly one-third of the neurodevelopmentally regulated genes is dependent on adr-2, the sole A-to-I editing enzyme in C. elegans However, we also identified a subset of neural transcripts that are edited and expressed throughout development. Despite a neural-specific down-regulation of adr-2 during development, the majority of these sites show increased editing in adult neural cells. Biochemical data suggest that ADR-1, a deaminase-deficient member of the adenosine deaminase acting on RNA (ADAR) family, is competing with ADR-2 for binding to specific transcripts early in development. Our data suggest a model in which during neural development, ADR-2 levels overcome ADR-1 repression, resulting in increased ADR-2 binding and editing of specific transcripts. Together, our findings reveal tissue- and development-specific regulation of RNA editing and identify a molecular mechanism that regulates ADAR substrate recognition and editing efficiency.Item A protein-protein interaction underlies the molecular basis for substrate recognition by an adenosine-to-inosine RNA-editing enzyme(Oxford University Press, 2018-10-12) Rajendren, Suba; Manning, Aidan C.; Al-Awadi, Haider; Yamada, Kentaro; Takagi, Yuichiro; Hundley, Heather A.; Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of MedicineAdenosine deaminases that act on RNA (ADARs) convert adenosine to inosine within double-stranded regions of RNA, resulting in increased transcriptomic diversity, as well as protection of cellular double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) from silencing and improper immune activation. The presence of dsRNA-binding domains (dsRBDs) in all ADARs suggests these domains are important for substrate recognition; however, the role of dsRBDs in vivo remains largely unknown. Herein, our studies indicate the Caenorhabditis elegans ADAR enzyme, ADR-2, has low affinity for dsRNA, but interacts with ADR-1, an editing-deficient member of the ADAR family, which has a 100-fold higher affinity for dsRNA. ADR-1 uses one dsRBD to physically interact with ADR-2 and a second dsRBD to bind to dsRNAs, thereby tethering ADR-2 to substrates. ADR-2 interacts with >1200 transcripts in vivo, and ADR-1 is required for 80% of these interactions. Our results identify a novel mode of substrate recognition for ADAR enzymes and indicate that protein-protein interactions can guide substrate recognition for RNA editors.Item Role of Adenosine A1 Receptors in Native Coronary Atherosclerosis, In-stent Stenosis, and Coronary Blood Flow Regulation in Metabolic Syndrome and Exercise(2010-04-08T13:47:08Z) Long, Xin; Sturek, Michael Stephen; Considine, Robert V.; Gunst, Susan J.; Herring, B. Paul; Tune, Johnathan D.Adenosine is widely thought to elicit coronary vasodilation and attenuate smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation, thereby providing cardioprotection. We cloned the porcine adenosine A1 receptor (A1R) subtype and found that it paradoxically stimulated proliferation of cultured coronary SMC by the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) signaling pathways, thus suggesting A1R dysregulation could play a role in coronary artery disease (CAD), restenosis, and regulation of coronary blood flow (CBF). We utilized the Ossabaw swine model of metabolic syndrome (MetS) to test the hypothesis that A1R activation contributes to development of CAD, in-stent stenosis, and CBF regulation. Swine were fed standard chow (Lean) or excess calorie atherogenic diet for over 20 weeks, which elicited MetS characteristics and coronary atherosclerosis compared to Lean. We observed increased A1R in native CAD in MetS, which was reversed by exercise training, and upregulation of A1R expression and A1R-ERK1/2 activation in an in vitro organ culture model of CAD. Intracoronary stent deployment followed by different durations of recovery showed A1R upregulation occurred before maximal in-stent stenosis in vi vivo. More importantly, selective A1R antagonism with 8-cyclopentyl-1, 3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX)-eluting stents decreased coronary ERK1/2 activation and reduced in-stent stenosis comparable to Taxus® (paclitaxel-eluting stents). A1R antagonism potentiated vasodilatory effects of some vasodilators other than adenosine in porcine coronary microcirculation under basal conditions. Short-term exercise training around stenting prevented stent-induced microvascular dysfunction and attenuated native atheroma in the genetically lean Yucatan swine. Conclusions: A1R upregulation and activation contributes to coronary in-stent stenosis in vivo in MetS, plays a role in the development of coronary atherosclerosis in vitro, and might involve in CBF dysregulation in dyslipidemia and stenting. Exercise training decreased A1R expression in atherosclerosis, reduced native atheroma, and prevented stent-induced microvascular dysfunction. Selective pharmacological antagonism of A1R holds promise for treatment of CAD.