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Ectonucleotidases of CD39 family modulate vascular inflammation and thrombosis in transplantation

journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by S C Robson, Y Wu, X Sun, C Knosalla, Karen DwyerKaren Dwyer, K Enjyoji
Transplantation results in exposure of the graft vasculature to warm and cold ischemia, followed by perfusion by circulating blood constituents and obligatory oxidant stress. Further graft injury occurs as consequences of acute humoral cellular rejection or chronic transplant vasculopathy, or both. Extracellular nucleotide stimulation of purinergic type 2 (P2) receptors are key components of platelet, endothelial cell (EC), and leukocyte activation resulting in vascular thrombosis and inflammation in vivo. CD39, the prototype nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase (NTPDase-1) is highly expressed on endothelium; in contrast, CD39L1/NTPDase-2 (a preferential adenosine triphosphatase [ATPase]) is found on vascular adventitial cells. Both ectoenzymes influence thrombogenesis by the regulated hydrolysis of extracellular nucleotides that differentially regulate P2-receptor activity and function in platelets and vascular cells. The intracytoplasmic domains of NTPDase-1 may also independently influence cellular activation and proliferation. NTPDase activity is substantively lost in the vasculature of injured or rejected grafts. A role for NTPDase-1 in thromboregulation has been validated by generation of mutant mice either null for cd39 or overexpressing human CD39. Administration of soluble NTPDase or induction of CD39 by adenoviral vectors, or both, are also of benefit in several models of transplantation. Administration of soluble CD39 or targeted expression may have future therapeutic application in transplantation-associated and other vascular diseases.

History

Journal

Seminars in thrombosis and hemostasis

Volume

31

Issue

2

Pagination

217 - 233

Publisher

Thieme Publishing Group

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

0094-6176

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.