Daddona P E, Kelley W N
Mol Cell Biochem. 1980 Feb 8;29(2):91-101. doi: 10.1007/BF00220303.
A deficiency of the enzyme adenosine deaminase is associated with an autosomal recessive form of severe combined immunodeficiency disease in man. The molecular forms of the normal human enzyme have now been well characterized in an effort to better understand the nature of the enzyme defect in affected patients. In some human tissues adenosine deaminase exists predominantly as a small molecular form while in other tissues a large form composed of adenosine deaminase (small form) and an adenosine deaminase-binding protein predominates. The small form of the enzyme purified to homogeneity by antibody affinity chromatography is a monomer of native molecular weight of 37,600. The adenosine deaminase-binding protein, purified by adenosine deaminase affinity chromatography, appears to be a dimer of native molecular weight 213,000 and contains carbohydrate. Based on direct binding measurements, chemical cross-linking studies and sedimentation equilibrium analyses, small form adenosine deaminase has been shown to combine with purified binding protein in a molar ratio of 2:1 respectively to produce the large form adenosine deaminase. Reduced, but widely ranging levels of adenosine deaminating activity, have been reported in various tissues of adenosine deaminase deficient patients. Further, the characteristics of this residual enzyme activity have been analyzed immunochemically to substantiate genetic heterogeneity in this disorder. While many types of immunodeficiency are currently recognized in man, in most cases the molecular defect is unknown. The discovery of a deficiency of the enzyme, adenosine deaminase, ADA, (EC 3.5.4.4), in some patients with severe combined immunodeficiency disease represented an early clue to the pathogenesis of immune dysfunction at the molecular level 1-4. Affected patients with markedly reduced levels of ADA exhibit a defect of both cellular and humoral immunity characterized clinically by severe recurrent infections with a fatal outcome if untreated. Attempts to elucidate the nature of the genetic mutation(s) leading to the reduction of ADA activity in these immunodeficient patients have been complicated in part by an incomplete understanding of the nature of ADA in normal tissues. In this review we will consider the structural characteristics of the normal and mutant forms of ADA as they are currently understood.
腺苷脱氨酶缺乏与人类常染色体隐性遗传的严重联合免疫缺陷病相关。为了更好地理解患病患者体内酶缺陷的本质,现已对正常人该酶的分子形式进行了充分表征。在一些人体组织中,腺苷脱氨酶主要以小分子形式存在,而在其他组织中,由腺苷脱氨酶(小分子形式)和一种腺苷脱氨酶结合蛋白组成的大分子形式占主导。通过抗体亲和层析纯化至同质的该酶小分子形式是天然分子量为37,600的单体。通过腺苷脱氨酶亲和层析纯化的腺苷脱氨酶结合蛋白似乎是天然分子量为213,000的二聚体,且含有碳水化合物。基于直接结合测量、化学交联研究和沉降平衡分析,已表明小分子形式的腺苷脱氨酶分别以2:1的摩尔比与纯化的结合蛋白结合,产生大分子形式的腺苷脱氨酶。据报道,腺苷脱氨酶缺乏患者的各种组织中腺苷脱氨活性水平降低但差异很大。此外,已通过免疫化学分析这种残余酶活性的特征,以证实该疾病中的遗传异质性。虽然目前在人类中已识别出多种类型的免疫缺陷,但在大多数情况下分子缺陷尚不清楚。在一些严重联合免疫缺陷病患者中发现酶腺苷脱氨酶(ADA,EC 3.5.4.4)缺乏,这是分子水平免疫功能障碍发病机制的早期线索1 - 4。ADA水平显著降低的患病患者表现出细胞免疫和体液免疫缺陷,临床上其特征为严重反复感染,若不治疗则会致命。部分由于对正常组织中ADA本质的不完全理解,阐明导致这些免疫缺陷患者中ADA活性降低的基因突变本质的尝试变得复杂。在本综述中,我们将考虑目前所了解的ADA正常和突变形式的结构特征。