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1.
Katahira R  Ashihara H 《Planta》2006,225(1):115-126
To find general metabolic profiles of purine ribo- and deoxyribonucleotides in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants, we looked at the in situ metabolic fate of various 14C-labelled precursors in disks from growing potato tubers. The activities of key enzymes in potato tuber extracts were also studied. Of the precursors for the intermediates in de novo purine biosynthesis, [14C]formate, [2-14C]glycine and [2-14C]5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxyamide ribonucleoside were metabolised to purine nucleotides and were incorporated into nucleic acids. The rates of uptake of purine ribo- and deoxyribonucleosides by the disks were in the following order: deoxyadenosine > adenosine > adenine > guanine > guanosine > deoxyguanosine > inosine > hypoxanthine > xanthine > xanthosine. The purine ribonucleosides, adenosine and guanosine, were salvaged exclusively to nucleotides, by adenosine kinase (EC 2.7.1.20) and inosine/guanosine kinase (EC 2.7.1.73) and non-specific nucleoside phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.77). Inosine was also salvaged by inosine/guanosine kinase, but to a lesser extent. In contrast, no xanthosine was salvaged. Deoxyadenosine and deoxyguanosine, was efficiently salvaged by deoxyadenosine kinase (EC 2.7.1.76) and deoxyguanosine kinase (EC 2.7.1.113) and/or non-specific nucleoside phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.77). Of the purine bases, adenine, guanine and hypoxanthine but not xanthine were salvaged for nucleotide synthesis. Since purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) activity was not detected, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.7) and hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8) seem to play the major role in salvage of adenine, guanine and hypoxanthine. Xanthine was catabolised by the oxidative purine degradation pathway via allantoin. Activity of the purine-metabolising enzymes observed in other organisms, such as purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1), xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.22), adenine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.2), adenosine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.4) and guanine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.3), were not detected in potato tuber extracts. These results suggest that the major catabolic pathways of adenine and guanine nucleotides are AMP → IMP → inosine → hypoxanthine → xanthine and GMP → guanosine → xanthosine → xanthine pathways, respectively. Catabolites before xanthosine and xanthine can be utilised in salvage pathways for nucleotide biosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Purine nucleotide synthesis and interconversion were examined over a range of purine base and nucleoside concentrations in intact N4 and N4TG (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) deficient) neuroblastoma cells. Adenosine was a better nucleotide precursor than adenine, hypoxanthine or guanine at concentrations greater than 100 μM. With hypoxanthine or guanine, N4TG cells had less than 2% the rate of nucleotide synthesis of N4 cells. At substrate concentrations greater than 100 μM the rates for deamination of adenosine and phosphorolysis of guanosine exceeded those for any reaction of nucleotide synthesis. Labelled inosine and guanosine accumulated from hypoxanthine and guanine, respectively, in HGPRT-deficient cells and the nucleosides accumulated to a greater extent in N4 cells indicating dephosphorylation of newly synthesized IMP and GMP to be quantitatively significant. A deficiency of xanthine oxidase, guanine deaminase and guanosine kinase activities was found in neuroblastoma cells. Hypoxanthine was a source for both adenine and guanine nucleotides, whereas adenine or guanine were principally sources for adenine (>85%) or guanine (>90%) nucleotides, respectively. The rate of [14C]formate incorporation into ATP, GTP and nucleic acid purines was essentially equivalent for both N4 and N4TG cells. Purine nucleotide pools were also comparable in both cell lines, but the concentration of UDP-sugars was 1.5 times greater in N4TG than N4 cells.  相似文献   

3.
The enzymes involved in the purine interconversion pathway of wild-type and purine analog-resistant strains of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg were assayed by radiometric and spectrophotometric methods. Wild-type cells incorporated labeled adenine, guanine, and hypoxanthine, whereas mutant strains varied in their ability to incorporate these bases. Adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, and xanthine were activated by phosphoribosyltransferase activities present in wild-type cell extracts. Some mutant strains simultaneously lost the ability to convert both guanine and hypoxanthine to the respective nucleotide, suggesting that the same enzyme activates both bases. Adenosine, guanosine, and inosine phosphorylase activities were detected for the conversion of base to nucleoside. Adenine deaminase activity was detected at low levels. Guanine deaminase activity was not detected. Nucleoside kinase activities for the conversion of adenosine, guanosine, and inosine to the respective nucleotides were detected by a new assay. The nucleotide-interconverting enzymes AMP deaminase, succinyl-AMP synthetase, succinyl-AMP lyase, IMP dehydrogenase, and GMP synthetase were present in extracts; GMP reductase was not detected. The results indicate that this autotrophic methanogen has a complex system for the utilization of exogenous purines.  相似文献   

4.
1. Pentatrichomonas hominis was found incapable of de novo synthesis of purines. 2. Pentatrichomonas hominis can salvage adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, adenosine, guanosine and inosine, but not xanthine for the synthesis of nucleotides. 3. HPLC tracing of radiolabelled purines or purine nucleosides revealed that adenine, adenosine and hypoxanthine are incorporated into adenine nucleotides and IMP through a similar channel while guanine and guanosine are salvaged into guanine nucleotides via another route. There appears to be no direct interconversion between adenine and guanine nucleotides. Interconversion between AMP and IMP was observed. 4. Assays of purine salvage enzymes revealed that P. hominis possess adenosine kinase; adenosine, guanosine and inosine phosphotransferases; adenosine, guanosine and inosine phosphorylases and AMP deaminase.  相似文献   

5.
The metabolism of some purine compounds to urate and their effects on de novo urate synthesis in chicken hepatocytes were investigated. The purines, listed in descending order of rates of catabolism to urate, were hypoxanthine, xanthine, inosine, guanosine, guanine, IMP, GMP, adenosine, AMP, and adenine. During a 1-h incubation period, conversion to urate accounted for more than 80% of the total quantities of guanine, guanosine, and inosine metabolized, but only 42% of the adenosine and 23% of the adenine metabolism. Adenine, adenosine, and AMP inhibited de novo urate synthesis [( 14C]formate incorporation into urate), whereas the other purines, especially guanine, guanosine, and GMP, stimulated de novo urate synthesis. When hepatocytes were incubated with glutamine and adenosine, AMP, guanine, guanosine, or GMP, the rates of de novo urate synthesis were lower than the additive effects of glutamine and the purine in separate incubations. Increasing phosphate concentrations had no effect on urate synthesis in the absence of added purines but, in combination with adenosine, AMP, guanosine, or GMP, increased urate synthesis. These results indicate that the ratio of adenine to guanine nucleotides and the interaction between substrates and purine nucleotides are involved in the regulation of urate biosynthesis in chicken liver.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of mycophenolic acid (MPA) which inhibits the biosynthesis of guanosine monophosphate (GMP) in organ cultures of mouse tooth germs can be partially counteracted by adding guanine to the MPA cultures. This may be due to salvaging guanine by the enzyme hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT), or to competition for a common membrane carrier involved in mediated transport of both guanine and hypoxanthine in normal biosynthesis and also of MPA. Experiments were carried out to compare the effect of either hypoxanthine or guanine on the MPA-caused inhibition. While addition of guanine to the MPA cultures (MPAG) supports growth equal to controls and development of dental-enamel junction (DEJ) to a level intermediate between control and MPA the addition of hypoxanthine (MPAHX) supports growth and DEJ development not better than MPA. This indicates that guanine is salvaged by HGPRT to GMP while hypoxanthine, salvaged to inosinic acid (inosinic monophosphate, IMP) is ineffective because the MPA inhibition is on the pathway from IMP to GMP.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of adenine and (or) guanosine concentration on the accumulation of inosine, xanthosine, adenosine and succino-adenosine were studied with various purine auxotrophs of Bacillus subtilis K strain. Genetical derepression of the common pathway enzymes resulted in increase in the accumulation of inosine, xanthosine and adenosine. Co-operative repression system of a common pathway enzyme, succino-AMP lyase with respect to adenine and guanosine, was confirmed under the condition of the accumulation test. From these and the relating other studies it was concluded that the synthesis of AMP was regulated mainly by the inhibition of PRPP amidotransferase by AMP and secondly by the repression of the common pathway enzymes by adenine and guanosine, that the synthesis of GMP was regulated mainly by the inhibition and repression of IMP dehydrogenase by guanine derivatives and that GMP was synthesized in preference to AMP at the branch point, IMP.  相似文献   

8.
To determine the metabolic profiles of purine nucleotides and related compounds in leaves and roots of tea (Camellia sinensis), we studied the in situ metabolic fate of 10 different (14)C-labeled precursors in segments from tea seedlings. The activities of key enzymes in tea leaf extracts were also investigated. The rates of uptake of purine precursors were greater in leaf segments than in root segments. Adenine and adenosine were taken up more rapidly than other purine bases and nucleosides. Xanthosine was slowest. Some adenosine, guanosine and inosine was converted to nucleotides by adenosine kinase and inosine/guanosine kinase, but these compounds were easily hydrolyzed, and adenine, guanine and hypoxanthine were generated. These purine bases were salvaged by adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. Salvage activity of adenine and adenosine was high, and they were converted exclusively to nucleotides. Inosine and hypoxanthine were salvaged to a lesser extent. In situ (14)C-tracer experiments revealed that xanthosine and xanthine were not salvaged, although xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase activity was found in tea extracts. Only some deoxyadenosine and deoxyguanosine was salvaged and utilized for DNA synthesis. However, most of these deoxynucleosides were hydrolyzed to adenine and guanine and then utilized for RNA synthesis. Purine alkaloid biosynthesis in leaves is much greater than in roots. In situ experiments indicate that adenosine, adenine, guanosine, guanine and inosine are better precursors than xanthosine, which is a direct precursor of a major pathway of caffeine biosynthesis. Based on these results, possible routes of purine metabolism are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The [3H]guanosine and [3H]guanine label is shown to be distributed unevenly in the purine components of chicken tissues. 60 min after isotope administration about 80% of radioactivity is localized in xanthine and uric acid in the liver and duodenum, that agrees with high activity of purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) and guanine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.3). At the same time over 50% of label is found in the spleen in adenine nucleotides of the pool, RNA as well as in hypoxanthine and only 20% in oxypurines. Such a distribution of the label is in direct correlation with the activity of GMP-reductase (EC 1.6.6.8) catalyzing the reduction deamination of GMP in IMP.  相似文献   

10.
Guanine uptake and metabolism in Neurospora crassa   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Guanine is transported into germinated conidia of Neurospora crassa by the general purine base transport system. Guanine uptake is inhibited by adenine and hypoxanthine but not xanthine. Guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (GPRTase) activity was demonstrated in cell extracts of wild-type germinated conidia. The Km for guanine ranged from 29 to 69 micro M in GPRTase assays; the Ki for hypoxanthine was between 50 and 75 micro M. The kinetics of guanine transport differ considerably from the kinetics of GPRTase, strongly suggesting that the rate-limiting step in guanine accumulation in conidia is not that catalyzed by GPRTase. Efflux of guanine or its metabolites appears to have little importance in the regulation of pools of guanine or guanine nucleotides since very small amounts of 14C label were excreted from wild-type conidia preloaded with [8-14C]guanine. In contrast, excretion of purine bases, hypoxanthine, xanthine, and uric acid appears to be a mechanism for regulation of adenine nucleotide pools (Sabina et al., Mol. Gen. Genet. 173:31-38, 1979). No label from exogenous [8-14C]guanine was ever found in any adenine nucleotides, nucleosides, or the base, adenine, upon high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of acid extracts from germinated conidia of wild-type of xdh-l strains. The 14C label from exogenous [8-14C]guanine was found in GMP, GDP, GTP, and the GDP sugars as well as in XMP. Xanthine and uric acid were also labeled in wild-type extracts. Similar results were obtained with xdh-l extracts except that uric acid was not present. The labeled xanthine and XMP strongly suggest the presence of guanase and xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase in germinated conidia.  相似文献   

11.
Acholeplasma laidlawii B-PG9 was examined for 16 cytoplasmic enzymes with activity for purine salvage and interconversion. Phosphoribosyltransferase activities for adenine, guanine, xanthine, and hypoxanthine were shown. Adenine, guanine, xanthine, and hypoxanthine were ribosylated to their nucleoside. Adenosine, inosine, xanthosine, and guanosine were converted to their base. No ATP-dependent phosphorylation of nucleosides to mononucleotides was found. However, PPi-dependent phosphorylation of adenosine, inosine, and guanosine to AMP, inosine monophosphate, and GMP, respectively, was detected. Nucleotidase activity for AMP, inosine monophosphate, xanthosine monophosphate, and GMP was also found. Interconversion of GMP to AMP was detected. Enzyme activities for the interconversion of AMP to GMP were not detected. Therefore, A. laidlawii B-PG9 cannot synthesize guanylates from adenylates or inosinates. De novo synthesis of purines was not detected. This study demonstrates that A. laidlawii B-PG9 has the enzyme activities for the salvage and limited interconversion of purines and, except for purine nucleoside kinase activity, is similar to Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides. This is the first report of a PPi-dependent nucleoside kinase activity in any organism.  相似文献   

12.
Purine metabolism in Toxoplasma gondii   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
We have studied the incorporation and interconversion of purines into nucleotides by freshly isolated Toxoplasma gondii. They did not synthesize nucleotides from formate, glycine, or serine. The purine bases hypoxanthine, xanthine, guanine, and adenine were incorporated at 9.2, 6.2, 5.1, and 4.3 pmol/10(7) cells/h, respectively. The purine nucleosides adenosine, inosine, guanosine, and xanthosine were incorporated at 110, 9.0, 2.7, and 0.3 pmol/10(7) cells/h, respectively. Guanine, xanthine, and their respective nucleosides labeled only guanine nucleotides. Inosine, hypoxanthine, and adenine labeled both adenine and guanine nucleotide pools at nearly equal ratios. Adenosine kinase was greater than 10-fold more active than the next most active enzyme in vitro. This is consistent with the metabolic data in vivo. No other nucleoside kinase or phosphotransferase activities were found. Phosphorylase activities were detected for guanosine and inosine; no other cleavage activities were detected. Deaminases were found for adenine and guanine. Phosphoribosyltransferase activities were detected for all four purine nucleobases. Interconversion occurs only in the direction of adenine to guanine nucleotides.  相似文献   

13.
Pulse-labeling of the nucleotide pool in Entamoeba histolytica with radioactive precursors, and subsequent high performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) analysis of the radiolabeled nucleotides, indicate that E. histolytica is incapable of de novo synthesis of purine nucleotides. Hypoxanthine, inosine and xanthine could not be converted to nucleotides in E. histolytica, which suggests the absence of interconversion between adenine nucleotides and guanine nucleotides through formation of IMP. Adenosine was actively incorporated into nucleotides at an initial rate of 130 pmoles per minute per 10(6) trophozoites. Adenine, guanosine and guanine were also incorporated at much lower rates. The rate of adenine incorporation was enhanced by the presence of guanosine; the rate of guanine incorporation was significantly increased by adenosine. These stimulatory effects suggest that the ribose moiety of adenosine or guanosine can be transferred to another purine base to form a new nucleoside, and that the purine nucleosides are the immediate precursors of E. histolytica nucleotides. HPLC results showed that the radiolabel in adenine was exclusively incorporated into adenine nucleotides and that guanine was found only among guanine nucleotides, whereas the radioactivity associated with the ribose moiety of adenosine or guanosine was distributed among both adenine and guanine nucleotides.  相似文献   

14.
By successive mutagenic treatments including transduction with bacteriophage SP–10, ultraviolet light irradiation and N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine treatments, a mutant, strain No. 322, capable of converting exogenously supplemented hypoxanthine or inosine to guanine and guanosine, was derived from an adenine-less, IMP-producing mutant of Bacillus subtilis IAM 1145. Strain No. 322 was an adenine-leaky mutant lacking GMP-reductase, adenase, and 5′-nucleotidase. The strain effectively accumulated guanine and guanosine in the culture fluid, when grown in the presence of hypoxanthine or inosine, while it failed to convert exogenously supplemented IMP to the guanine derivatives.  相似文献   

15.
Coggin, Joseph H. (University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.), Muriel Loosemore, and William R. Martin. Metabolism of 6-mercaptopurine by resistant Escherichia coli cells. J. Bacteriol. 92:446-454. 1966.-6-Mercaptopurine (MP) utilization as a source of purine in MP-sensitive and -resistant cultures of Escherichia coli was investigated. The label of MP-8-C(14) appeared in adenine and guanine of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid in sensitive and resistant cultures. Studies using MP-S(35) further demonstrated that the MP moiety was degraded, as shown by a rapid decrease in radioactivity from cells upon exposure to MP for 20 min. Enzymatic analysis showed that MP was converted to 6-mercaptopurine ribonucleotide (MPRP) by extracts derived from both sensitive and resistant cells. Resistant cell preparations, however, degraded MPRP to inosine monophosphate (IMP) rapidly when compared with analogue degradation by sensitive cells. Inosineguanosine-5'-phosphate pyrophosphorylase from resistant cells did not catalyze the synthesis of IMP from hypoxanthine when the cells were cultured in the presence of MP, but these enzyme preparations actively converted guanine to guanosine monophosphate (GMP). Pyrophosphorylase derived from resistant cells cultured in medium without MP catalyzed the conversion of hypoxanthine to IMP and also guanine to GMP. These observations suggest that inosine-guanosine-5'-phosphate pyrophosphorylase is composed of two distinct enzymes. The mode of resistance to MP in E. coli is related to an enhancement of the enzymatic degradation of MPRP to the pivotal purine intermediate, IMP.  相似文献   

16.
Yeast cells inhibited by benzimidazole accumulate hypoxanthine with associated efflux of xanthine. Unlike control cells, inhibited cells contain no detectable free UMP and CMP. Benzimidazole decreases uptake of [8-14C]hypoxanthine into the intracellular pool of hypoxanthine and xanthine but causes radioactive xanthine to accumulate in the medium. In inhibited cultures there is a threefold increase in incorporation of [8-14C]hypoxanthine into the total (intracellular plus extracellular) xanthine. Uptake of [8-14C]hypoxanthine into free nucleotides and into bound adenine and guanine was inhibited by 70%. Uptake of [U-14C]glycine into IMP, AMP, GMP, DNA and RNA was also substantially decreased. Incorporation of [2-14C]uracil into the intracellular uracil pool was inhibited by 30% and into free uridine and cytidine by over 90%. Benzimidazole inhibited incorporation of [8-3H]IMP into AMP and GMP, and decreased substantially the activity of glutamine-amidophosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.14). Yeast cultures were shown to N-ribotylate benzimidazole. Results are consistent with benzimidazole inhibiting yeast growth by competing for P-rib-PP and so depriving other ribotylation processes such as the 'salvage' pathways and de novo synthesis of purines and pyrimidines.  相似文献   

17.
The activity of enzymes catalyzing the reactions of successive degradation to the IMP and GMP bases as well as reactions of the reutilization and degradation of the hypoxanthine and guanine bases in the chicken liver and spleen is determined. The passage rate of [8-14C]hypoxanthine label through IMP and [8-3H]guanine label through GMP is studied together with the metabolism intensity of adenine-hypoxanthine-, xanthine- and guanine-containing components and labelled acid of the acid-soluble fraction of the test tissues in experiments in vivo. The results obtained evidence for functioning of conjugated ways of hypoxanthine- and guanine-derivatives in the so-called nucleoside cycles in the chicken tissues, the activity of the guanosine cycle (GMP----guanosine----guanine----CMP) in the liver being higher than that in inosine one (IMP----inosine----hypoxanthine----IMP), whereas in the spleen, vice versa, the activity of the metabolism of hypoxanthine derivatives is higher than that of guanine derivatives.  相似文献   

18.
Ribonucleotide flavor enhancers such as inosine monophosphate (IMP) and guanosine monophosphate (GMP) provide umami taste, similarly to glutamine. Japanese cuisine frequently uses soup stocks containing these nucleotides to enhance umami. We quantified 18 types of purines (nucleotides, nucleosides, and purine bases) in three soup stocks (chicken, consommé, and dried bonito soup). IMP was the most abundant purine in all umami soup stocks, followed by hypoxanthine, inosine, and GMP. The IMP content of dried bonito soup was the highest of the three soup stocks. We also evaluated the effects of these purines on extracellular and intracellular purine metabolism in HepG2 cells after adding each umami soup stock to the cells. An increase in inosine and hypoxanthine was evident 1 h and 4 h after soup stock addition, and a low amount of xanthine and guanosine was observed in the extracellular medium. The addition of chicken soup stock resulted in increased intracellular and extracellular levels of uric acid and guanosine. Purine metabolism may be affected by ingredients present in soups.  相似文献   

19.
The uptake of purine nucleosides (guanosine and hypoxanthine) and bases (guanine, hypoxanthine and adenine) and their incorporation into nucleotides were studied in enterocytes isolated from fed and 3-day fasted guinea pig jejunum. Both total uptake and synthesis of nucleotides were greater for these purines in the fasted, as compared to the fed state for the first 5 min, when the initial substrate concentration in the medium was 10 microM. Increased uptake did not result from a change in the relative distribution of synthesized nucleotides between the fed and fasted states. Reduced catabolism was observed in the medium by enterocytes from fasted as compared to fed animals after 1 min of incubation with both inosine and guanosine. Preincubation of enterocytes with allopurinol (a xanthine oxidase inhibitor) decreased total uptake but increased the formation of IMP from hypoxanthine. Xanthine oxidase activity measured in mucosa from fasted guinea pigs was lower than that from fed animals (6.29 vs. 9.30 nmol/min per mg protein, respectively). However, activities of the salvage enzymes adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase were not significantly different between the fed and fasted states. These data show that allopurinol treatment, and mucosal atrophy resulting from fasting, decrease xanthine oxidase activity and increase nucleotide synthesis from exogenous substrates in enterocytes from the guinea-pig small intestine, suggesting a regulatory function of mucosal xanthine oxidase in purine salvage by the small intestine.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphoribosyltransferase (PRTase) and nucleoside phosphorylase (NPase) activities were detected by radiometric methods in extracts of Methanococcus voltae. Guanine PRTase activity was present at 2.7 nmol min(-1) mg of protein(-1) and had an apparent Km for guanine of 0.2 mM and a pH optimum of 9. The activity was inhibited 50% by 0.3 mM GMP. IMP and AMP were not inhibitory at concentrations up to 0.6 mM. Hypoxanthine inhibited by 50% at 0.16 mM, and adenine and xanthine were not inhibitory at concentrations up to 0.5 mM. Guanosine NPase activity was present at 0.01 nmol min(-1) mg of protein(-1). Hypoxanthine PRTase activity was present at 0.85 nmol min(-1) mg of protein(-1) with an apparent Km for hypoxanthine of 0.015 mM and a pH optimum of 9. Activity was stimulated at least twofold by 0.05 mM GMP and 0.2 mM IMP but was unaffected by AMP. Guanine inhibited by 50% at 0.06 mM, but adenine and xanthine were not inhibitory. Inosine NPase activity was present at 0.04 nmol min(-1) mg of protein(-1). PRTase activities were not sensitive to any base analogs examined, with the exception of 8-azaguanine, 8-azahypoxanthine, and 2-thioxanthine. Fractionation of cell extracts by ion-exchange chromatography resolved three peaks of activity, each of which contained both guanine and hypoxanthine PRTase activities. The specific activities of the PRTases were not affected by growth in medium containing the nucleobases. Mutants of M. voltae resistant to base analogs lacked PRTase activity. Two mutants resistant to both 8-azaguanine and 8-azahypoxanthine lacked activity for both guanine and hypoxanthine PRTase. These results suggest that analog resistance was acquired by the loss of PRTase activity.  相似文献   

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