Enzyme Functions
ADP-ribose is an intermediate that is produced during the metabolism of NAD+, mono- or poly-unsaturated proteins, and cyclic-ADP ribose. ADP-ribose is a protein-glycating agent, and excess levels of ADP-ribose in the cell can cause non-enzymatic ADP-ribosylation. Non-enzymatic ADP-ribosylation can inactivate protein targets that contain nucleotide-binding sites when the adenylate moiety of ADP-ribose binds to them, and it can also interfere with metabolic regulation that occurs via enzymatic ADP-ribosylation. For example, actin polymerization is inhibited by non-enzymatic ADP-ribosylation at a Cys residue. Thus, it is believed that ADPRase functions in general as a house-cleaning enzyme to eliminate potentially deleterious ADP-ribose from the cell.
In the literature, the detoxifying role of ADPRase is directly supported in E. coli cells. But in mammalian cells, there is only an indirect evidence linking ADPRase to a detoxifying role, and this comes from studies of the very specific rat liver ADPRibase-I by cytotoxic agents.
Read more about this topic: ADP-ribose Diphosphatase
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