Fairbanks L D, Taddeo A, Duley J A, Simmonds H A
Purine Research Laboratory, UMDS Guy's Hospital London, UK.
J Immunol. 1990 Jan 15;144(2):485-91.
This study was designed to simulate purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) deficiency by preincubating with guanosine (Guo) to minimize PNP activity while investigating the metabolism of [14C] deoxyguanosine (dGuo) at physiologic concentrations (10 microM) by unstimulated thymocytes, tonsil-derived T and B lymphocytes, and peripheral blood cells over short time periods. GTP was the principal metabolite formed from dGuo by all cell types with functional PNP and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, confirming formation via degradation to guanine with subsequent salvage by hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. Thymocytes also formed a small amount of deoxyguanosine triphosphate (dGTP), presumably through direct phosphorylation by deoxycytidine kinase. Incorporation of dGuo into GTP was effectively inhibited in all instances under PNP deficiency conditions and dGTP levels increased up to 10-fold in thymocytes, but tonsil-derived B or T lymphocytes and unfractionated PBL still accumulated no detectable dGTP. E and platelets formed low amounts of dGTP under these conditions. Preincubation with adenine (50 microM) to reverse any Guo-induced toxicity reduced the incorporation of dGuo into GTP without inhibitor in all cell types with intact adenine phosphoribosyltransferase, but had no effect on dGTP accumulation in thymocytes, with or without inhibitor, thus excluding any indirect formation of dGTP via the de novo route. The rapid metabolism of dGuo to GTP, in the absence of PNP inhibition and subsequent effects of the altered GTP concentrations on cellular metabolism, may account for the differing responses reported by investigators with the use of low dGuo concentrations (enhancing), compared with high (inhibitory), concentrations in mitogen-stimulated lymphocyte studies. The exclusive ability of thymocytes to accumulate significant amounts of dGTP, and inability of B cells to do so, provides a logical explanation for the selective T cell immunodeficiency in PNP deficiency.
本研究旨在通过与鸟苷(Guo)预孵育来模拟嘌呤核苷磷酸化酶(PNP)缺乏,以最小化PNP活性,同时在短时间内研究生理浓度(10 microM)的[14C]脱氧鸟苷(dGuo)在未刺激的胸腺细胞、扁桃体来源的T和B淋巴细胞以及外周血细胞中的代谢情况。GTP是所有具有功能性PNP和次黄嘌呤 - 鸟嘌呤磷酸核糖基转移酶的细胞类型由dGuo形成的主要代谢产物,证实是通过降解为鸟嘌呤随后由次黄嘌呤 - 鸟嘌呤磷酸核糖基转移酶进行补救合成而形成。胸腺细胞还形成少量的脱氧鸟苷三磷酸(dGTP),推测是通过脱氧胞苷激酶直接磷酸化形成。在PNP缺乏条件下,所有情况下dGuo掺入GTP均被有效抑制,胸腺细胞中的dGTP水平增加高达10倍,但扁桃体来源的B或T淋巴细胞以及未分级的外周血淋巴细胞仍未积累可检测到的dGTP。在这些条件下,红细胞和血小板形成少量的dGTP。用腺嘌呤(50 microM)预孵育以逆转任何Guo诱导的毒性,在所有具有完整腺嘌呤磷酸核糖基转移酶的细胞类型中,可降低无抑制剂时dGuo掺入GTP的量,但对胸腺细胞中dGTP的积累无影响,无论有无抑制剂,因此排除了通过从头合成途径间接形成dGTP的可能性。在没有PNP抑制以及改变的GTP浓度对细胞代谢的后续影响的情况下,dGuo快速代谢为GTP,这可能解释了研究人员在有丝分裂原刺激的淋巴细胞研究中使用低dGuo浓度(增强)与高浓度(抑制)时所报告的不同反应。胸腺细胞积累大量dGTP的独特能力以及B细胞无法做到这一点,为PNP缺乏时选择性T细胞免疫缺陷提供了合理的解释。