Nucleotides are essential components of living cells. They are the building blocks of nucleic acid chains, the energy source of metabolism and biosynthetic processes, and participate as co-factors or activators of numerous enzymatic reactions and guanine nucleotide binding protein (G protein) signaling. In addition, nucleotides are released from cells in a regulated manner to accomplish autocrine and paracrine roles via activation of cell surface purinergic receptors.
Two groups of purinergic receptors, P2X and P2Y receptors, transduce the presence of nucleotides in the extracellular milieu into cellular responses (
Burnstock 2006). The P2X receptor family, constituted by seven molecularly defined species (P2X
1-P2X
7), are ligand-gated anion channels activated exclusively by ATP (
North 2002). The P2Y receptor family is comprised by eight G protein-coupled receptors (P2Y
1, P2Y
2, P2Y
4, P2Y
6, P2Y
11, P2Y
12, P2Y
13, and P2Y
14) that are activated by ATP, ADP, UTP, UDP, and UDP-sugars in the extracellular milieu (
Burnstock 2006). In addition, the nucleoside, adenosine, the final product of ATP breakdown, activates a separate family of G protein-coupled receptors, initially named P1 receptors. The adenosine receptor family is constituted by four species currently designed as A
1, A
2a, A
2b, and A
3 adenosine receptors (
Fredholm et al. 2001). The agonist selectivity and signaling properties of all purinergic receptors are illustrated in .
| Table 1Purinergic receptors: agonist selectivity and signaling properties. |
Purinergic receptor-mediated responses include cell proliferation, migration, differentiation and death, embryological development, wound healing, restenosis, atherosclerosis, ischaemia, cell turnover of epithelial cells in skin and visceral organs, airway MCC, inflammation, neuroprotection and cancer (
Burnstock 2006). The Gq/phospholipase C-coupled P2Y
2 and P2Y
6 receptors, the Gs/adenylyl cyclase-coupled A
2b receptor, and possibly P2X
4 receptors are expressed on the apical surface of human airway epithelial cells (
Mason et al. 1991;
Lazarowski et al. 1992;
Parr et al. 1994;
Lazarowski et al. 1996;
Lazarowski et al. 1997b;
Morse et al. 2001;
Cobb et al. 2002;
Cobb et al. 2003;
Szkotak et al. 2003;
Zsembery et al. 2004). Physiological, pharmacological, and genetic studies suggest that A
2b and P2Y
2 receptors are major transducers of nucleotide/nucleoside-regulated ciliary beating and ion and water transport (
Mason et al. 1991;
Lazarowski et al. 1997b;
Morse et al. 2001;
Cobb et al. 2002;
Cobb et al. 2003;
Szkotak et al. 2003;
Zsembery et al. 2004). P2Y
2 receptors, but not A2b receptors, appear to regulate mucin secretion in the airway epithelia (
Conway et al. 2003;
Davis et al. 2007, and see below).
2.1 Nucleotide release from epithelial cells
The superficial human airway epithelium that mediates MCC is composed mainly of ciliated cells and, to a lesser extent, mucin-secreting goblet cells. Airway surface liquid (ASL) volume regulation by ciliated cells and gel-forming mucin secretion from goblet cells are exquisitely coordinated to maintain physiologic viscoelastic properties of the two ASL layers, i.e., the periciliary and mucus layers. Depletion of ASL in cystic fibrosis leads to mucus dehydration and cilia collapse and, ultimately, impaired MCC and infection. Thus, an essential component of MCC function involves the regulation of ASL volume by electrolyte transport.
Mucin, the principal polymeric species in the mucus matrix, is condensed inside secretory granules and is secreted without involving ion and water secretion from goblet cells (
Verdugo 1991;
Davis et al. 1992). Effective mucin dispersion in the ASL requires coordinated ion and water channel activities (mainly Na
+ absorption and Cl
− secretion) to provide adequate water secretion onto the mucosal surface (
Boucher 2007). While it is recognized that mucus hydration and other MCC activities are regulated in part by signals generated within the ASL (
Tarran et al. 2006), the mechanisms by which ion/water secretion and mucin secretion rates are coordinated are poorly understood. All naturally occurring nucleotides species known to be potent agonist on purinergic receptors are present in physiologically relevant concentrations in ASL both
in vivo and
in vitro (
Lazarowski et al. 1997a;
Watt et al. 1998;
Donaldson et al. 2000;
Lazarowski et al. 2000;
Lazarowski et al. 2003;
Lazarowski et al. 2004). Functional and biochemical evidence indicate that release and metabolism of nucleotides into ASL contribute to purinergic receptor-promoted activation of electrolyte transport and ASL volume homeostasis. For example, (i) in resting airway epithelia, enzymatic removal of endogenous adenosine in ASL or blockade of the A
2b receptor results in reduced cyclic AMP formation and impaired Cl
− secretion via the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) channel, leading to ASL volume depletion (
Lazarowski et al. 2004), and (ii) shear-stress promotes apyrase-sensitive Ca
2+-dependent ion transport and ASL production in both normal and CF airway epithelia (
Tarran et al. 2005;
Tarran et al. 2006). Recent studies with mucin secreting airway epithelial cell models suggest that nucleotide released to ASL is, at least in part, associated with mucin exocytosis. For example, in SPOC1 cells, a well-defined rat airway goblet cell line, which secrete gel forming-mucins in response to P2Y
2 receptor stimulation (
Abdullah et al. 1996), P2Y
2 receptor activation resulted in enhanced mucin secretion which was accompanied by release of ATP (
Kreda et al. 2007). Using polarized cultures of Calu-3 cells, an airway epithelial cell line composed by a mixed population of non-mucous cells and gel forming-mucin secreting goblet-like cells, it was illustrated that Ca
2+-promoted mucin secretion was accompanied by luminal ATP release. Like mucin secretion, ATP release from Calu-3 cells was inhibited by maneuvers that disrupted vesicle exocytosis. Moreover, when Calu-3 cells were loaded with acridine orange or quinacrine, two fluorescent dyes known to label storage granules (and other acidic compartments) in secretory cells, strong fluorescence was associated with granules that were both competent for Ca
2+-triggered exocytosis and resembled mucin granules in size, sub-cellular localization, and susceptibility to pharmacological inhibitors (
Kreda et al. 2007). Thus, an attractive although not formally tested hypothesis is that nucleotide release from goblet cells is mechanistically associated with mucin secretion, perhaps, as co-cargo molecules within mucin granules. Such a scenario would provide paracrine information for ASL volume production and cilia beating during the discharge of mucins onto the airways.
2.2 Extracellular metabolism of nucleotides multi-signaling pathways
Although resting airway epithelial cells release ATP at a rate of ~370 fmoles/min.cm
2, ecto-ATPase activities hydrolyze extracellular ATP at about the same rate (
Lazarowski et al. 2004). The resulting, relatively rapid clearance of ATP from the airway surface maintains ASL ATP levels (1-10 nM) below threshold values for activating the P2Y
2 receptor [EC
50 = 230 nM (
Lazarowski et al. 1996)]. However, ATP release and metabolism provides a source of adenosine. Since adenosine removal from ASL occurs with a
k value [0.08 min
−1;
Lazarowski, E. R. et al. 2004] 10 fold smaller than that for ATP, adenosine accumulation on resting epithelia may be physiologically relevant. Indeed, this prediction was verified by direct measurement of purines in ASL. By combining ASL microsampling and high performance liquid chromatography analysis of fluorescent 1,
N6-ethenoadenine derivatives, adenosine, AMP, ADP, and ATP concentrations in ASL could be quantified simultaneously, with nanomolar sensitivity. While ATP concentration on resting epithelia represented only a ~3% of the total ASL adenyl purine pool, adenosine levels (100-200 nM) were in range of activating A
2b receptor (
Lazarowski et al. 2004). The physiological role of adenosine was established by illustrating that adenosine removal or inhibition of adenosine receptors in resting primary cultures of human bronchial epitleial cells impaired ASL production (
Lazarowski et al. 2004).
While adenosine acting via A
2b receptors appears to be the major input to ion channel activities in resting epithelia, ASL ATP levels arise sharply upon shear stress, reaching levels capable of promoting P2Y
2 receptor-mediated Ca
2+-dependent Cl
− secretory responses (
Tarran et al. 2005).
Levels of ATP and adenosine in ASL, and consequently airway epithelial P2Y
2 and A
2b receptor activation, are controlled by a complex array of nucleotide metabolizing enzymes that include ecto-nucleotidases, non-specific phosphatases, and transphosphorylating activities (
Donaldson et al. 2000;
Lazarowski et al. 2000;
Picher et al. 2003). Lastly, adenosine deaminase converts adenosine into pharmacologically inactive inosine, and nucleoside transporters incorporate adenosine, inosine, and other nucleosides back into cells (
Hirsh et al. 2007).
Thus, airway epithelial MCC functions reflect a multi-signaling system in which release, metabolism, and inter-conversion of purinergic agonists on the epithelial cell surface play a crucial role. Major nucleotide hydrolyzing activities expressed on the lumen of the airway epithelia include (i) ecto-ATPase (most likely NTPDase3, CD39L3), which removes the terminal phosphate from nucleoside triphosphates (NTP) and diphosphates (NDP) with a 3:1 preference for NTP, (ii) E-NPP, which catalyzes the breakdown of NTP to nucleoside monophosphate (NMP) plus pyrophosphate, and (iii) non-specific alkaline phosphatase (NSAP), which sequentially removes phosphate from NTP, NDP, and NMP (
Picher et al. 2001;
Picher et al. 2004;
Tarran et al. 2005). Ecto-5′nucleotidase (ecto-5′NT, CD73) de-phosphorylates AMP and other NMPs, generating the corresponding nucleoside. The relatively low K
m value towards AMP displayed by ecto-5′NT (14 ± 3 μM) over NSAP (717 ± 49 μM) (
Picher et al. 2004) suggests that ecto-5′NT activity generates most of ASL adenosine when AMP supply is in the submicromolar concentration range, as observed under various physiological conditions (
Lazarowski et al. 2004). Indeed, in bronchial cultures and tissues, ecto 5′-NT accounted for >80% of total activity toward micromolar concentrations of exogenous AMP (
Picher et al. 2004). Intriguing, the two AMP hydrolyzing enzymes, i.e., NSAP and ecto-5′NT, presented opposite airway distributions, ecto 5′-NT and NS AP mRNA dominating in higher and lower airways, respectively. While inhibition of ecto-5′NT activity reduced A
2b receptor-promoted CFTR-mediated Cl
− secretion in epithelial culture models, the potential role of NSAP on adenosine formation and airway epithelial A
2b receptor signaling is not known (
Huang et al. 2001;
Lazarowski et al. 2004).
In addition to the above-mentioned nucleotidase activities, ASL nucleotides are substrate of transphosphorylating activities, i.e., nucleoside diphosphokinase (NDPK) and adenyly kinase (AK). NDPK reversibly phosphorylates ADP and UDP to their respective NTP (e. g., ADP + UTP ↔ ATP + UDP), and AK converts two molecules of ADP to ATP plus AMP (2ADP ↔ ATP + AMP). The reason for the occurrence of ASL NDPK and AK is not well understood. However, although it is widely assumed that nucleotides are released from epithelial cells in their triphosphate forms (e.g., ATP and UTP), this has not been established unambiguously. UDP and ADP are abundantly present in the lumen of the secretory pathway and they may be released together with ATP via vesicular exocytosis (Lazarowski et al. 2003a). Once in the extracellular medium, ADP is susceptible to conversion to ATP via either NDPK or AK. Similarly, UDP may become acceptor substrate in the NDPK-catalyzed formation of UTP. Since the activities of both NDPK and AK in ASL surmount that of ecto-nucleotidases under a number of conditions (
Lazarowski, E. R. et al. 2000;
Picher, M. et al. 2003), these ecto enzymes may play an important role by propagating P2Y
2 receptor mediated signaling.
In summary, ASL nucleotide levels reflect a balance between rates of nucleotide release and metabolism. P2Y2 and A2b receptor-mediated Ca2+ and cyclic AMP-regulated ion channel activities in ciliated cells greatly depend on such a balance. Nucleotide release occurring simultaneously with mucin secretion provides a signaling mechanism for ion and water transport necessary for mucin hydration and dispersion into the ASL, and for its cilia-driven transport.