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1.
C Salerno  A Giacomello 《Biochemistry》1985,24(6):1306-1309
The uptake and release of [14C]hypoxanthine by human erythrocytes, suspended in a tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris)-glucose-NaCl isotonic medium (pH 7.4), have been studied at 37 degrees C. The uptake of hypoxanthine, mediated by its incorporation into inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP), was markedly stimulated by preincubating the cells in phosphate-buffered saline. After a lag time, [14C]IMP-enriched erythrocytes released [14C]hypoxanthine in the medium. Formycin B, at concentrations known to inhibit purine nucleoside phosphorylase in intact erythrocytes, affected hypoxanthine uptake and release and led to an increase in the intracellular concentration of inosine, suggesting that the main catabolic path of IMP is the sequential degradation of the nucleotide to inosine and hypoxanthine. The addition of guanine to a suspension of [14C]IMP-enriched erythrocytes led to an increase in the rate of [14C]hypoxanthine release, which was unaffected by the presence of formycin B. During the guanine-induced hypoxanthine release, guanine was taken up by the cells as GMP. These results suggest that the presence of guanine in the incubation medium activates a catabolic path in human erythrocytes leading to IMP degradation without formation of inosine.  相似文献   

2.
Uptake of hypoxanthine and guanine into isolated membrane vesicles of Salmonella typhimurium TR119 was stimulated by 5'-phosphoribosyl-1'-pyrophosphate (PRPP). For strain proAB47, a mutant that lacks guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, PRPP stimulated uptake of hypoxanthine into membrane vesicles. No PRPP-stimulated uptake of guanine was observed. For strain TR119, guanosine 5'-monophosphate and inosine 5'-monophosphate accumulated intravesicularly when guanine and hypoxanthine, respectively, were used with PRPP as transport substrates. For strain proAB47, IMP accumulated intravesicularly with hypoxanthine and PRPP as transport substrates. For strain TR119, hypoxanthine also accumulated when PRPP was absent. This free hypoxanthine uptake was completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, but the PRPP-stimulated uptake of hypoxanthine was inhibited only 20% by N-ethylmaleimide. Hypoxanthine and guanine phosphoribosyltransferase activity paralleled uptake activity in both strains. But, when proAB47 vesicles were sonically treated to release the enzymes, a three- to sixfold activation of phosphoribosyltransferase molecules occurred. Since proAB47 vessicles lack the guanine phsophoribosyltransferase gene product and since hypoxanthine effectively competes out the phosphoribosylation of guanine by proAB47 vesicles, it was postulated that the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gains specificity for both guanine and hypoxanthine when released from the membrane. A group translocation as the major mechanism for the uptake of guanine and hypoxanthine was proposed.  相似文献   

3.
Adenine uptake and hypoxanthine release by IMP-enriched human erythrocytes has been studied. The presence of IMP within the erythrocytes leads to an increase in the rate of adenine incorporation. Adenine is taken up by IMP-enriched erythrocytes as AMP, even when intracellular 5-phoshorobosyl-1-pyrophosphate concentration is undetectable and too low to allow IMP synthesis from hypoxanthine. During adenine uptake and AMP synthesis, hypoxanthine is released by the cells. The possibility that 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate, necessary for AMP synthesis, is formed through the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferese-catalyzed IMP pyrophosphorolysis is considered.  相似文献   

4.
Adenosine, through activation of membrane-bound receptors, has been reported to have neuroprotective properties during strokes or seizures. The role of astrocytes in regulating brain interstitial adenosine levels has not been clearly defined. We have determined the nucleoside transporters present in rat C6 glioma cells. RT-PCR analysis, (3)H-nucleoside uptake experiments, and [(3)H]nitrobenzylthioinosine ([(3)H]NBMPR) binding assays indicated that the primary functional nucleoside transporter in C6 cells was rENT2, an equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) that is relatively insensitive to inhibition by NBMPR. [(3)H]Formycin B, a poorly metabolized nucleoside analogue, was used to investigate nucleoside release processes, and rENT2 transporters mediated [(3)H]formycin B release from these cells. Adenosine release was investigated by first loading cells with [(3)H]adenine to label adenine nucleotide pools. Tritium release was initiated by inhibiting glycolytic and oxidative ATP generation and thus depleting ATP levels. Our results indicate that during ATP-depleting conditions, AMP catabolism progressed via the reactions AMP --> IMP --> inosine --> hypoxanthine, which accounted for >90% of the evoked tritium release. It was surprising that adenosine was not released during ATP-depleting conditions unless AMP deaminase and adenosine deaminase were inhibited. Inosine release was enhanced by inhibition of purine nucleoside phosphorylase; ENT2 transporters mediated the release of adenosine or inosine. However, inhibition of AMP deaminase/adenosine deaminase or purine nucleoside phosphorylase during ATP depletion produced release of adenosine or inosine, respectively, via the rENT2 transporter. This indicates that C6 glioma cells possess primarily rENT2 nucleoside transporters that function in adenosine uptake but that intracellular metabolism prevents the release of adenosine from these cells even during ATP-depleting conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Microvessel segments were isolated from rat brain and used for studies of hypoxanthine transport and metabolism. Compared to an homogenate of cerebral cortex, the isolated microvessels were 3.7-fold enriched in xanthine oxidase. Incubation of the isolated microvessels with labeled hypoxanthine resulted in its rapid uptake followed by the slower accumulation of hypoxanthine metabolites including xanthine and uric acid. The intracellular accumulation of these metabolites was inhibited by the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol. Hypoxanthine transport into isolated capillaries was inhibited by adenine but not by representative pyrimidines or nucleosides. Similar results were obtained when blood to brain transport of hypoxanthine in vivo was measured using the intracarotid bolus injection technique. Thus, hypoxanthine is transported into brain capillaries by a transport system shared with adenine. Once inside the cell, hypoxanthine can be metabolized to xanthine and uric acid by xanthine oxidase. Since this reaction leads to the release of oxygen radicals, it is suggested that brain capillaries may be susceptible to free radical mediated damage. This would be most likely to occur in conditions where the brain hypoxanthine concentration is increased as following ischemia.  相似文献   

6.
Incubation of human erythrocytes in medium containing inosine (10 mM), pyruvate (10 mM), phosphate (50 mM) and NaCl (75 mM) at pH 6.6 leads to a more than 1000-fold increase in the concentration of 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate (PRPP), as identified and quantified by 31P-n.m.r. spectroscopy. The accumulation is highly pH-dependent, with a maximum at extracellular pH 6.60, and the maximum value of 1.3-1.6 mmol/l of erythrocytes is attained within 1 h at 37 degrees C. PRPP was accumulated despite high concentrations of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (2,3-BPG), an inhibitor of PRPP synthetase. The concentration of PRPP correlated with the intracellular concentration of inorganic phosphate (Pi). Substitution of either adenosine or adenosine plus inosine for inosine in the medium did not lead to 31P-n.m.r.-detectable accumulation of PRPP. These results show that neither 2,3-BPG nor PRPP itself inhibits the synthesis of PRPP in the human erythrocyte. Adenosine, however, prevents the inosine-stimulated accumulation of PRPP.  相似文献   

7.
Inosine-producing cultures were found among mutants resistant to 6-mercaptoguanine (6MG) derived from a 5'-inosinic acid (IMP)-producing strain, KY 13102, of Brevibacterium ammoniagenes. Inosine-producing ability was very frequent among the mutants resistant to a low concentration (10 to 50 mug/ml) of 6MG. The accumulation of inosine by strain KY 13714 was stimulated by a low concentration of adenine (25 mg/liter) but was depressed by high levels of adenine. The accumulation by strain KY 13714 was not inhibited by manganese ion but instead was stimulated by its excess, in contrast to IMP accumulation by KY 13102. Addition of hypoxanthine at an early stage of cultivation accelerated inosine accumulation. Furthermore, on addition of hypoxanthine and of a surface-activating agent after 48 hr of cultivation, the simultaneous accumulation of IMP and inosine was observed. A 9.3-mg amount of inosine per ml accumulated after 4 days of cultivation at 30 C. The inosine-producing mutant did not differ from the IMP-producing strain either in 5' purine nucleotide degradation or in IMP formation from hypoxanthine. However, it was found to be completely devoid of purine nucleoside-degrading activity. The conversion of IMP accumulation to inosine can be explained by the lack of nucleosidedegrading activity. The relationship between deficiency of nucleoside-degrading activity and resistance to low levels of 6MG is discussed, and a new mechanism for 6MG resistance is presented.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
1. Intact human red cells do not attack exogenous IMP. The nucleotide is readily broken down by the soluble erythrocyte fraction to inosine, hypoxanthine and ribose 1-phosphate, with a pH optimum of approx. 6.2. 2. Ribose 1-phosphate can be actively reutilized, in the presence of ATP and hypoxanthine, to give IMP, at pH 7.4. The velocity of the IMP salvage synthesis dramatically increases at more alkaline pH values. 3. The two curves relating the velocities of IMP breakdown and of IMP synthesis as a function of hydrogen ion concentration intersect at pH 7.4. 4. The observations might be relevant in the process of purine transport by red cells.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of adenosine on adenine nucleotide metabolism in [14C]adenine-labeled rat thymocytes were studied. It was shown that adenosine increases the intracellular pool of adenine nucleotides, predominantly ATP, which is accompanied by marked acceleration of their catabolism and a release of labeled products (especially inosine, hypoxanthine and adenosine) from the thymocytes. The effect of adenosine depends on its concentration and manifests itself already at 10(-6) M. 2-Deoxycoformycin partly relieves the effect of adenosine on adenine nucleotide metabolism. Exogenous deoxyadenosine, inosine, hypoxanthine and adenine, unlike adenosine, do not significantly affect the adenine nucleotide catabolism and the label release from the cells. All the effectors under study strongly increase inosine transport from the thymocytes, and inhibit, with the exception of adenosine, the hypoxanthine release from the cells.  相似文献   

11.
A reliable assay was developed to characterize crude cell homogenates with regard to their adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activities. The 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP)-dependent formation of AMP from adenine is followed spectrophotometrically at 265 nm by coupling it with the following two-stage enzymatic conversion: AMP + H2O----adenosine + Pi (5'-nucleotidase); adenosine + H2O----inosine + NH3 (adenosine deaminase). The same principle was applied to develop a spectrophotometric and a radioenzymatic assay for PRPP. The basis of the spectrophotometric assay is the absorbance change at 265 nm associated with the enzymatic conversion of PRPP into inosine, catalyzed by the sequential action of partially purified adenine phosphoribosyltransferase, commercial 5'-nucleotidase, and commercial adenosine deaminase, in the presence of excess adenine. In the radiochemical assay PRPP is quantitatively converted into [14C]inosine via the same combined reaction. Tissue extracts are incubated with excess [14C]adenine. The radioactivity of inosine, separated by a thin-layer chromatographic system, is a measure of PRPP present in tissue extracts. The radioenzymatic assay is at least as sensitive as other methods based on the use of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase. However, it overcomes the reversibility of the reaction and the need to use transferase preparations free of any phosphatase and adenosine deaminase activities.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Silica particles are toxic to primary cultures of macrophages or the P388D1 cell line in vitro. Loss of viability in these model systems is accompanied by depletion of ATP content within 3 to 6 hours. The mechanisms responsible for ATP depletion will be explored in this paper. After prelabeling for 1 hour with 3H-adenine, silica-treated cells released 60-80% of their labeled acid-soluble pool into the culture medium. This release did not occur after phagocytosis of nontoxic titanium dioxide particles and was specific for purines. ATP depletion was accompanied by purine catabolism: inosine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, and uric acid were detected in the culture medium using thin layer or high-performance liquid chromatography. The final xanthine oxidase step in purine catabolism generates reactive oxygen metabolites. Silica toxicity was not prevented by the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol nor exogenous purines. It is concluded that adenine nucleotide depletion and purine catabolism are not solely responsible for irreversible injury in silica toxicity. It is hypothesized that purine catabolism and release from injured macrophages may lead to generation of reactive oxygen species, injury to surrounding tissue, and fibrosis.  相似文献   

14.
Recently, we have shown that erythrocytes obtained from patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) exhibited an increased rate of ATP formation from adenine as a substrate. Thus, we concluded that this process was in part responsible for the increase of adenine nucleotide concentration in uremic erythrocytes. There cannot be excluded however, that a decreased rate of adenylate degradation is an additional mechanism responsible for the elevated ATP concentration. To test this hypothesis, in this paper we compared the rate of adenine nucleotide breakdown in the erythrocytes obtained from patients with CRF and from healthy subjects.Using HPLC technique, we evaluated: (1) hypoxanthine production by uremic RBC incubated in incubation medium: (a) pH 7.4 containing 1.2 mM phosphate (which mimics physiological conditions) and (b) pH 7.1 containing 2.4 mM phosphate (which mimics uremic conditions); (2) adenine nucleotide degradation (IMP, inosine, adenosine, hypoxanthine production) by uremic RBC incubated in the presence of iodoacetate (glycolysis inhibitor) and EHNA (adenosine deaminase inhibitor). The erythrocytes of healthy volunteers served as control.The obtained results indicate that adenine nucleotide catabolism measured as a hypoxanthine formation was much faster in erythrocytes of patients with CRF than in the cells of healthy subjects. This phenomenon was observed both in the erythrocytes incubated at pH 7.4 in the medium containing 1.2 mM inorganic phosphate and in the medium which mimics hyperphosphatemia (2.4 mM) and metabolic acidosis (pH 7.1). The experiments with EHNA indicated that adenine nucleotide degradation proceeded via AMP-IMP-Inosine-Hypoxanthine pathway in erythrocytes of both patients with CRF and healthy subjects. Iodoacetate caused a several fold stimulation of adenylate breakdown. Under these conditions: (a) the rate of AMP catabolites (IMP + inosine + adenosine + hypoxanthine) formation was substantially higher in the erythrocytes from patients with CRF; (b) in erythrocytes of healthy subjects degradation of AMP proceeded via IMP and via adenosine essentially at the same rate; (c) in erythrocytes of patients with CRF the rate of AMP degradation via IMP was about 2 fold greater than via adenosine.The results presented in this paper suggest that adenine nucleotide degradation is markedly accelerated in erythrocytes of patients with CRF.  相似文献   

15.
The intracellular concentration of the cosubstrate 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) may be rate-limiting for the reactions, catalysed by hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, by which mammalian cells convert the purine bases hypoxanthine, xanthine, and guanine to their ribonucleotide derivatives. The rate of conversion of [14C]hypoxanthine to radioactive phosphorylated products by intact human diploid skin fibroblasts was measured in the presence of compounds previously reported to alter PRPP concentration in a variety of cell types Methylene blue, previously reported to increase PRPP concentration in a variety of cultured cells including skin fibroblasts, increased product formation from hypoxanthine, with maximum effect following 60 min preincubation with 0.4 mM. Incubation with adenine, orotic acid, allopurinol, or adenosine has been shown to decrease PRPP concentration. Of these compounds, only adenine and adenosine decreased the rate of ribonucleotide synthesis from hypoxanthine in cultured skin fibroblasts. This decrease probably resulted from decreased PRPP synthesis rather than increased PRPP utilization. The reaction products isolated from cells following incubation with either [14C]adenine or [14C]adenosine included adenosine monophosphate and adenosine diphosphate, both inhibitors of PRPP synthetase.  相似文献   

16.
The intracellular concentration of the cosubstrate 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) may be rate-limiting for the reactions, catalysed by hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, by which mammalian cells convert the purine bases hypoxanthine, xanthine, and guanine to their ribonucleotide derivatives. The rate of conversion of [14C]hypoxanthine to radioactive phosphorylated products by intact human diploid skin fibroblasts was measured in the presence of compounds previously reported to alter PRPP concentration in a variety of cell types Methylene blue, previously reported to increase PRPP concentration in a variety of cultured cells including skin fibroblasts, increased product formation from hypoxanthine, with maximum effect following 60 min preincubation with 0.4 mM. Incubation with adenine, orotic acid, allopurinol, or adenosine has been shown to decrease PRPP concentration. Of these compounds, only adenine and adenosine decreased the rate of ribonucleotide synthesis from hypoxanthine in cultured skin fibroblasts. This decrease probably resulted from decreased PRPP synthesis rather than increased PRPP utilization. The reaction products isolated from cells following incubation with either [14C]adenine or [14C]adenosine included adenosine monophosphate and adenosine diphosphate, both inhibitors of PRPP synthetase.  相似文献   

17.
Previous results demonstrated that the adenosine that accumulates in human fat cell suspensions is derived from extracellular sources (Kather, H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8803-8809). To get insight into the mechanisms responsible for the lack of adenosine release, extracellular adenine nucleotide catabolism was minimized by 10 mmol/liter beta-glycerophosphate and 10 mumol/liter alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-diphosphate. Intracellular adenine nucleotide catabolism resulted in a release of inosine and hypoxanthine under these conditions that was increased markedly by isoproterenol. Experiments with inhibitors of adenosine deaminase and adenosine kinase indicated that the production of inosine and hypoxanthine proceeded via AMP deamination. Consistently, IMP levels were increased transiently in the presence of isoproterenol. In addition, the cells possessed a nucleotide phosphomonoesterase that was resistant to the inhibitory actions of ATP and alpha,beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-diphosphate and showed preference for IMP over AMP. Adenosine (approximately 1 nmol/10(6) cells/h) was also produced inside the cells. However, adenosine production was unrelated to ATP turnover via adenylate cyclase, and any adenosine formed was immediately reconverted to adenine nucleotides in the absence and presence of isoproterenol. It was concluded that adenosine is not released by intact human adipocytes, because the alternative routes of intracellular AMP catabolism are compartmentalized (at least in functional terms), and adenosine kinase is not saturated with substrate in the absence and presence of isoproterenol.  相似文献   

18.
The uptake of adenine, guanine, guanosine and inosine by stored red cells was investigated in whole blood and red cell resuspensions at initial concentrations of 0.25, 0.5 and 0.75 mM for adenine and 0.5 mM for the other additives using a rapid ion-exchange chromatographic microanalysis of purines and nucleosides in plasma and whole blood. Increasing adenine concentrations from 0.25 to 0.75 mM in blood elevated the adenine uptake from 0.3 up to 0.8 mmol/l red cells during 2 hours after collecting blood. The intra-/extracellular distribution ratio changed from 1 : 1.3 to 1: 1.7. Some 2 hours after withdrawing blood into CPD--solution with purines and nucleosides the uptake of adenine and guanine resulted in 40 per cent and 70 per cent respectively and of guanosine and inosine in 80 and 90 per cent respectively. The replacement of plasma by a resuspending solution gave the same uptake rates for purines and nucleosides. The nucleosides were rapidly split to purines and R-1-P and disappeared from blood during one week. Adenine and guanine were utilized to 80 to 90 per cent only after 3 weeks. During the same period the utilization of guanine was smaller by 40 per cent than that of adenine due to the different activity of the purine nucleoside phosphorylase for these substrates. The plasma of all analyzed blood samples contained hypoxanthine and inosine, but guanine and guanosine were detected only in those samples to which one of them was added. After 3 weeks of storage the highest concentration of hypoxanthine was found in CPD-AI blood with 600 microM in plasma and the highest concentration of synthesized inosine in CPD-AG blood with a concentration of 100 microM in plasma. Three ways of utilization of purines by stored red cells were discussed : the synthesis of nucleotide monophosphates, the formation of nucleosides, and the deamination. The portions of these ways change during storage. The most effective concentrations of adenine and guanosine in stored blood seems to be 0.25 and 0.5 mM respectively. The full utilization of the nucleoside requires the addition of inorganic phosphate.  相似文献   

19.
1. The role of adenosine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.4), ecto-(5'-nucleotidase) (EC 3.1.3.5) and ecto-(non-specific phosphatase) in the CN-induced catabolism of adenine nucleotides in intact rat polymorphonuclear leucocytes was investigated by inhibiting the enzymes in situ. 2. KCN (10mM for 90 min) induced a 20-30% fall in ATP concentration accompanied by an approximately equimolar increase in hypoxanthine, ADP, AMP and adenosine concentrations were unchanged, and IMP and inosine remained undetectable ( less than 0.05 nmol/10(7) cells). 3. Cells remained 98% intact, as judged by loss of the cytoplasmic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27). 4. Pentostatin (30 microM), a specific inhibitor of adenosine deaminase, completely inhibited hypoxanthine production from exogenous adenosine (55 microM), but did not black CN-induced hypoxanthine production or cause adenosine accumulation in intact cells. This implied that IMP rather than adenosine was an intermediate in AMP breakdown in response to cyanide. 5. Antibodies raised against purified plasma-membrane 5'-nucleotidase inhibited the ecto-(5'-nucleotidase) by 95-98%. Non-specific phosphatases were blocked by 10 mM-sodium beta-glycerophosphate. 6. These two agents together blocked hypoxanthine production from exogenous AMP and IMP (200 microM) by more than 90%, but had no effect on production from endogenous substrates. 7. These data suggest that ectophosphatases do not participate in CN-induced catabolism of intracellular AMP in rat polymorphonuclear leucocytes. 8. A minor IMPase, not inhibited by antiserum, was detected in the soluble fraction of disrupted cells.  相似文献   

20.
The uptake activity ratio for AMP, ADP, and ATP in mutant (T-1) cells of Escherichia coli W, deficient in de novo purine biosynthesis at a point between IMP and 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxiamide-1-β-D-ribofuranoside (AICAR), was 1:0.43:0.19. This ratio was approximately equal to the 5'-nucleotidase activity ratio in E. coli W cells. The order of inhibitory effect on [2-3H]ADP uptake by T-1 cells was adenine > adenosine > AMP > ATP. About 2-fold more radioactive purine bases than purine nucleosides were detected in the cytoplasm after 5 min in an experiment with [8-1?C]AMP and T-1 cells. Uptake of [2-3H]adenosine in T-1 cells was inhibited by inosine, but not in mutant (Ad-3) cells of E. coli W, which lacked adenosine deaminase and adenylosuccinate lyase. These experiments suggest that AMP, ADP, and ATP are converted mainly to adenine and hypoxanthine via adenosine and inosine before uptake into the cytoplasm by E. coli W cells.  相似文献   

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