Purinergic Signalling

, Volume 7, Issue 1, pp 21–45

The GDA1_CD39 superfamily: NTPDases with diverse functions

Review

DOI: 10.1007/s11302-010-9214-7

Cite this article as:
Knowles, A.F. Purinergic Signalling (2011) 7: 21. doi:10.1007/s11302-010-9214-7

Abstract

The first comprehensive review of the ubiquitous “ecto-ATPases” by Plesner was published in 1995. A year later, a lymphoid cell activation antigen, CD39, that had been cloned previously, was shown to be an ecto-ATPase. A family of proteins, related to CD39 and a yeast GDPase, all containing the canonical apyrase conserved regions in their polypeptides, soon started to expand. They are now recognized as members of the GDA1_CD39 protein family. Because proteins in this family hydrolyze nucleoside triphosphates and diphosphates, a unifying nomenclature, nucleoside triphosphate diphopshohydrolases (NTPDases), was established in 2000. Membrane-bound NTPDases are either located on the cell surface or membranes of intracellular organelles. Soluble NTPDases exist in the cytosol and may be secreted. In the last 15 years, molecular cloning and functional expression have facilitated biochemical characterization of NTPDases of many organisms, culminating in the recent structural determination of the ecto-domain of a mammalian cell surface NTPDase and a bacterial NTPDase. The first goal of this review is to summarize the biochemical, mutagenesis, and structural studies of the NTPDases. Because of their ability in hydrolyzing extracellular nucleotides, the mammalian cell surface NTPDases (the ecto-NTPDases) which regulate purinergic signaling have received the most attention. Less appreciated are the functions of intracellular NTPDases and NTPDases of other organisms, e.g., bacteria, parasites, Drosophila, plants, etc. The second goal of this review is to summarize recent findings which demonstrate the involvement of the NTPDases in multiple and diverse physiological processes: pathogen-host interaction, plant growth, eukaryote cell protein and lipid glycosylation, eye development, and oncogenesis.

Keywords

NTPDases Ecto-ATPases ATP diphosphohydrolases Apyrases Purinergic signaling Protein glycosylation Plant growth Pathogen virulence Oncogenesis 

Abbreviations

NTPDase

Nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase

ATPDase

ATP diphosphohydrolase

ACR

Apyrase conserved regions

ConA

Concanavalin A

TM

Transmembrane

TMD

Transmembrane domains

ECD

Extracellular domain

Copyright information

© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011

Authors and Affiliations

  1. 1.Department of Chemistry and BiochemistrySan Diego State UniversitySan DiegoUSA

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