Autotaxin (ATX) is an exoenzyme that potently induces tumor cell motility, and enhances experimental metastasis and angiogenesis. ATX was shown recently to be identical to serum lysophospholipase D activity, producing lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) from lyso-glycerophospholipids. LPA, itself a strong chemoattractant for tumor cells, may mediate the actions of ATX. We now extend the substrate specificity to sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC), which ATX hydrolyzes to sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P). Under migration assay conditions, this novel reaction for the production of S1P has a substrate (SPC) K(m) = 0.23 +/- 0.07 mM. In our responder cell lines (NIH3T3 clone7 and A2058), S1P exerts maximal biological effects at concentrations of 10-100 nM and is mimicked in its biological effects by ATX plus SPC. These effects include inhibition of ATX- and LPA-stimulated motility, and elevation of activated Rho. In NIH3T3 clone7 cells stimulated with platelet-derived growth factor and treated with 10-25 nM S1P, motility is not inhibited and activation of Rho is unaffected, indicating that S1P possesses specificity in its effects. The exoenzyme ATX can potentially regulate diverse processes such as motility and angiogenesis via the S1P family of receptors. Because ATX hydrolyzes nucleotides, lyso-glycerophospholipids, and phosphosphingolipids into bioactive products, it possesses the ability, depending on the availability of substrates, to act as positive or negative regulator of receptor-mediated activity in the cellular microenvironment.
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Nat Cancer
February 2024
Department of Cell, Developmental & Cancer Biology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Lipids and their modifying enzymes regulate diverse features of the tumor microenvironment and cancer progression. The secreted enzyme autotaxin (ATX) hydrolyzes extracellular lysophosphatidylcholine to generate the multifunctional lipid mediator lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and supports the growth of several tumor types, including pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Here we show that ATX suppresses the accumulation of eosinophils in the PDAC microenvironment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpert Opin Ther Pat
July 2022
Center for Advanced Drug Research, Comsats Institute of Information Technology, Abbottabad, Pakistan.
Introduction: Ectobucleotidases are a broad class of extracellular nucleotide and nucleoside hydrolyzing enzymes. Since they play a crucial role in mediating purinergic cell signalling, they are promising therapeutic targets for treatment of a range of disorders, including fibrosis, tumor metastasis, inflammation, multiple sclerosis, and autoimmune diseases. Hence selective inhibtors of ectonulceotidases are of great interest for therapeutic intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Lipid Res
March 2022
Department of Pharmacology, Kawasaki Medical School, Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan.
Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a lipid mediator that regulates various processes, including cell migration and cancer progression. Autotaxin (ATX) is a lysophospholipase D-type exoenzyme that produces extracellular LPA. In contrast, glycerophosphodiesterase (GDE) family members GDE4 and GDE7 are intracellular lysophospholipases D that form LPA, depending on Mg and Ca, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Med (Berl)
December 2020
Department of Gastroenterology, Tongji Hospital, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Jiefang Avenue, 1095, 430030, Wuhan, People's Republic of China.
Autotaxin (ATX) is a secreted enzyme that hydrolyzes lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) to lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and choline. ATX has been implicated in multiple chronic inflammatory diseases, but little is known about its role in the development of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Here, we investigated how ATX contributed to intestinal inflammation during colitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids
August 2020
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, The Gill Heart and Vascular Institute, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, United States of America; Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Lexington, KY 40511, United States of America.
The bioactive lipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is emerging as an important mediator of inflammation in cardiovascular diseases. Produced in large part by the secreted lysophospholipase D autotaxin (ATX), LPA acts on a series of G protein-coupled receptors and may have action on atypical receptors such as RAGE to exert potent effects on vascular cells, including the promotion of foam cell formation and phenotypic modulation of smooth muscle cells. The signaling effects of LPA can be terminated by integral membrane lipid phosphate phosphatases (LPP) that hydrolyze the lipid to receptor inactive products.
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