Adenosine metabolism in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated human lymphocytes.

Abstract
The association of a human genetic deficiency of adenosine deaminase activity with combined immunodeficiency prompted a study of the effects of adenosine and of inhibition of adenosine deaminase activity on human lymphocyte transformation and a detailed study of adenosine metabolism throughout phytohemagglutinin-induced blastogenesis. The adenosine deaminase inhibitor, coformycin, at a concentration that inhibited adenosine deaminase activity more than 95%, or 50 muM adenosine, did not prevent blastogenesis by criteria of morphology or thymidine incorporation into acid-precipitable material. The combination of coformycin and adenosine, however, substantially reduced both the viable cell count and the incorporation of thymidine into DNA in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes. Incubation of lymphocytes with phytohemagglutinin for 72 h produced a 12-fold increase in the rate of deamination and a 6-fold increase in phosphorylation of adenosine by intact lymphocytes. There was no change in the apparent affinity for adenosine with either deamination or phosphorylation. The increased rates of metabolism, apparent as early as 3 h after addition of mitogen, may be due to increased entry of the nucleoside into stimulated lymphocytes. Increased adenosine metabolism was not due to changes in total enzyme activity; after 72 h in culture, the ratios of specific activities in extracts of stimulated to unstimulated lymphocytes were essentially unchanged for adenosine kinase, 0.92, and decreased for adenosine deaminase, 0.44. As much as 38% of the initial lymphocyte adenosine deaminase activity accumulated extracellularly after a 72-h culture with phytohemagglutinin. In phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes, the principal route of adenosine metabolism was phosphorylation at less than 5 muM adenosine, and deamination at concentrations greater than 5 muM. In unstimulated lymphocytes, deamination was the principal route of adenosine metabolism over the range of adenosine concentrations studied (0.5-250 muM). These studies demonstrate the dependence of both the unstimulated and stimulated lymphocyte on adenosine and may account for the observed sensitivity of mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes to the toxic effects of exogenously supplied adenosine in the presence of the adenosine deaminase inhibitor coformycin. A single case of immunodeficiency disease has been reported in association with purine nucleoside phosphorylase deficiency. The catabolism of guanosine was also found to be enhanced in stimulated normal lymphocytes; phosphorolysis of guanosine to guanine by intact lymphocytes increased six fold after 72-h culture with phytohemagglutinin. The specific activity of purine nucleoside phosphorylase in extracts, with guanosine as substrate, was essentially the same in stimulated and unstimulated lymphocytes after 72 h of culture.