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1.
Bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma brucie gambiense and Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense are incapable of de novo purine synthesis. Purine bases are converted directly to ribonucleotides and with the exception of guanine, are stable. Guanine is incorporated directly into ribonucleotides and also deaminated to xanthine. Purine ribonucleosides are hydrolyzed rapidly; these reactions may limit their incorporation since purine bases label the nucleotide pools more efficiently than do ribonucleosides. The apparent order of salvage efficiency for ribonucleosides is adenosine>inosine>guanosine>xanthosine for both organisms. T. b. gambiense salvages purine bases in the same order, while T. b. rhodesiense salvages purine bases in the order hypoxanthine>adenine>guanine>xanthine.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
We examined the purine alkaloid content and purine metabolism in cacao (Theobroma cacao L.) plant leaves at various ages: young small leaves (stage I), developing intermediate size leaves (stage II), fully developed leaves (stage III) from flush shoots, and aged leaves (stage IV) from 1-year-old shoots. The major purine alkaloid in stage I leaves was theobromine (4.5 μmol g–1 fresh weight), followed by caffeine (0.75 μmol g–1 fresh weight). More than 75% of purine alkaloids disappeared with subsequent leaf development (stages II–IV). In stage I leaves, 14C-labelled adenine, adenosine, guanine, guanosine, hypoxanthine and inosine were converted to salvage products (nucleotides and nucleic acids), to degradation products (ureides and CO2) and to purine alkaloids (3- and 7-methylxanthine, 7-methylxanthosine and theobromine). In contrast, 14C-labelled xanthine and xanthosine were not used for nucleotide synthesis. They were completely degraded, but nearly 20% of [8-14C]Xanthosine was converted in stage I leaves to purine alkaloids. These observations are consistent with the following biosynthetic pathways for theobromine: (a) AMP → IMP → 5′-xanthosine monophosphate → xanthosine → 7-methylxanthosine → 7-methylxanthine → theobromine; (b) GMP → guanosine → xanthosine → 7-methylxanthosine → 7-methylxanthine → theobromine; (c) xanthine → 3-methylxanthine → theobromine. Although no caffeine biosynthesis from 14C-labelled purine bases and nucleosides was observed during 18 h incubations, exogenously supplied [8-14C]Theobromine was converted to caffeine in young leaves. Conversion of theobromine to caffeine may, therefore, be slow in cacao leaves. No purine alkaloid synthesis was observed in the subsequent growth stages (stages II–IV). Significant degradation of purine alkaloids was found in leaves of stages II and III, in which [8-14C]Theobromine was degraded to CO2 via 3-methylxanthine, xanthine and allantoic acid. [8-14C]Caffeine was catabolised to CO2 via theophylline (1,3-dimethylxanthine) or theobromine.  相似文献   

4.
Human tuberculosis (TB) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, especially in poor and developing countries. Moreover, the emergence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains resistant to first- and second-line anti-TB drugs raises the prospect of virtually incurable TB. Enzymes of the purine phosphoribosyltransferase (PRTase) family are components of purine salvage pathway and have been proposed as drug targets for the development of chemotherapeutic agents against infective and parasitic diseases. The PRTase-catalyzed chemical reaction involves the ribophosphorylation in one step of purine bases (adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, or xanthine) and their analogues to the respective nucleoside 5′-monophosphate and pyrophosphate. Hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT; EC 2.4.2.8) is a purine salvage pathway enzyme that specifically recycles hypoxanthine and guanine from the medium, which are in turn converted to, respectively, IMP and GMP. Here we report cloning, DNA sequencing, expression in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) cells, purification to homogeneity, N-terminal amino acid sequencing, mass spectrometry analysis, and determination of apparent steady-state kinetic parameters for an in silico predicted M. tuberculosis HGPRT enzyme. These data represent an initial step towards future functional and structural studies, and provide a solid foundation on which to base M. tuberculosis HGPRT-encoding gene manipulation experiments to demonstrate its role in the biology of the bacillus.  相似文献   

5.
The synthesis, interconversion, and catabolism of purine bases, ribonucleosides, and ribonucleotides in wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae were studied by measuring the conversion of radioactive adenine, hypoxanthine, guanine, and glycine into acid-soluble purine bases, ribonucleosides, and ribonucleotides, and into nucleic acid adenine and guanine. The pathway(s) by which adenine is converted to inosinate is (are) uncertain. Guanine is extensively deaminated to xanthine. In addition, some guanine is converted to inosinate and adenine nucleotides. Inosinate formed either from hypoxanthine or de novo is readily converted to adenine and guanine nucleotides.  相似文献   

6.
Deficiency of either one of the subsequent purine catabolic enzymes adenosine deaminase or purine nucleoside phosphorylase results in immunodeficiency disease in humans. However, the mechanism by which impairment of purine metabolism may cause immunodeficiency is unclear. In the present work we have studied the catabolism of purine ribonucleotides and deoxyribonucleotides in T lymphocytes to better understand the role of purine nucleoside phosphorylase and adenosine deaminase in the immune function. It was found that purine deoxyribonucleotides are degraded via catabolic pathways distinctly different from those used for purine ribonucleotide degradation. Thus both adenine and guanine ribonucleotides are deaminated to IMP whereas purine deoxyribonucleotides are exclusively dephosphorylated to the corresponding deoxyribonucleosides. These findings may explain the relatively higher degradation rates of purine deoxyribonucleotides in mammalian cells as compared to purine ribonucleotides. The catabolism of purine nucleotides is tightly linked to the active purine nucleoside cycles which consist of the phosphorolysis of purine nucleosides and deoxyribonucleosides to their corresponding bases, their salvage to monophosphates and back to the corresponding ribonucleosides. The above observations also imply that a possible role of the purine nucleoside cycles is to convert purine deoxyribonucleotides into their corresponding ribonucleotide derivatives. Deficiencies of purine nucleoside phosphorylase or of adenosine deaminase activities, enzymes which participate or lead to the purine nucleoside cycles, thus result in a selective impaired deoxyribonucleotide catabolism and immunodeficiency.  相似文献   

7.
The relative rates of the synthetic, interconversion and catabolic reactions of purine metabolism in chopped mouse cerebrum were studied. The rates of incorporation of [(14)C]adenine and [(14)C]hypoxanthine into purine ribonucleotides were much less than the potential activities of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, and the rates of incorporation were stimulated by the addition of guanosine to the incubation mixture. The availability of ribose phosphates may be a limiting factor for the formation of ribonucleotides from purine bases. The rate of incorporation of [(14)C]adenosine into purine ribonucleotides was at least seven- to eight-fold higher than that of adenine. The radioactivity in adenine ribonucleotides synthesized from adenine and hypoxanthine was about 100- and ten-fold respectively higher than that in the radioactive guanine ribonucleotides. The conversion of inosinate into guanine ribonucleotides was probably limited by the amount of inosinate available, and the conversion of adenine ribonucleotides into guanine ribonucleotides was probably limited by the activity of adenylate deaminase. The rate of catabolism of [(14)C]adenosine was low in comparison with its rate of utilization for ribonucleotide synthesis. A fraction of the [(14)C]hypoxanthine was catabolized to xanthine and urate. [(14)C]Guanine was completely converted into xanthine, mostly by the guanine deaminase that was released during incubation of chopped mouse cerebrum.  相似文献   

8.
1. The metabolism of xanthine and hypoxanthine in excised shoot tips of tea was studied with micromolar amounts of [2(-14)C]xanthine or [8(-14)C]hypoxanthine. Almost all of the radioactive compounds supplied were utilized by tea shoot tips by 30 h after their uptake. 2. The main products of [2(-14)C]xanthine and [8(-14)C]hypoxanthine metabolism in tea shoots were urea, allantoin and allantoic acid. There was also incorporation of the label into theobromine, caffeine and RNA purine nucleotides. 3. The results indicate that tea plants can catabolize purine bases by the same pathways as animals. It is also suggested that tea plants have the ability to snythesize purine nucleotides from glycine by the pathways of purine biosynthesis de novo and from hypoxanthine and xanthine by the pathway of purine salvage. 4. The results of incorporation of more radioactivity from [8(-14)C]hypoxanthine than from [2(-14)C]xanthine into RNA purine nucleotides and caffeine suggest that hypoxanthine is a more effective precursor of caffeine biosynthesis than xanthine. The formation of caffeine from hypoxanthine is a result of nucleotide synthesis via the pathway of purine salvage.  相似文献   

9.
Streptococcus faecalis (ATCC 8043) was shown to have a purine phosphoribosyltransferase specific for xanthine. This enzyme was separated from interfering activities by heat treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and affinity chromatography. The xanthine phosphoribosyltransfer activity of this preparation was stable between pH 5.6 and 10, had a pH optimum between pH 7.4 and 8.8, and had a particle weight of 42,000 as determined by G-100 Sephadex chromatography. An initial velocity analysis when plotted in double-reciprocal form resulted in a family of parallel lines which when extrapolated to infinite concentration gave Km values for xanthine and PP-ribose-P of 20 and 53 μm, respectively. Inhibition studies with 42 purine and purine analogs indicated that oxo groups at positions 2 and 6 of the purine ring were required for optimal binding. The substitution of thio for oxo reduced binding to the enzyme ca. 20-fold. In contrast to its rigid specificity with respect to the 2,6-dioxo substituents, the enzyme bound a variety of 4,5-condensed pyrimidine systems containing a nitrogen at the position corresponding to the N-7 of xanthine. At concentrations of 1 mm, hypoxanthine, adenine, and 4,6-dihydroxypyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine were converted to their corresponding ribonucleotides at rates approximately 0.1% of the rate for xanthine. Guanine was not detected as a substrate (rate <0.007% that of xanthine). The enzyme was inhibited by the ribonucleoside mono-, di-, and triphosphates of xanthine and guanine but not by those of adenine.  相似文献   

10.
We have extended peak-shift method for measuring purine bases to make it suitable for other purine-related compounds. We optimized the reactions of the purine metabolism enzymes 5′-nucleotidase (EC 3.1.3.5), purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) (EC 2.4.2.1), xanthine oxidase (XO) (EC 1.17.3.2), urate hydroxylase (EC 1.7.3.3), adenosine deaminase (ADA) (EC 3.5.4.4), and guanine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.3) by determining their substrate specificity and reaction kinetics. These enzymes eliminate the five purine base peaks (adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, and uric acid) and four nucleosides (adenosine, guanosine, inosine, and xanthosine). The bases and nucleosides can be identified and accurately quantified by comparing the chromatograms before and after treatment with the enzymes. Elimination of the individual purine compound peaks was complete in a few minutes. However, when there were multiple substrates, such as for XO, and when the metabolites were purine compounds, such as for PNP and ADA, it took longer to eliminate the peaks. The optimum reaction conditions for the peak-shift assay methods were an assay mixture containing the substrate (10 μL, 0.1 mg/mL), the combined enzyme solution (10 μL each, optimum concentration), and 50 mM sodium phosphate (up to 120 μL, pH 7.4). The mixture was incubated for 60 minutes at 37°C. This method should be suitable for determining the purine content of a variety of samples, without interference from impurities.  相似文献   

11.
The requirements for purine nucleotide synthesis, the effects of purine analogues, and the metabolism of adenine in the bacterium Helicobacter pylori were investigated employing cell culture techniques and one-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. Bacterial cells grew and proliferated in media lacking preformed purines, indicating that H. pylori can synthesize purine nucleotides de novo to meet its requirements. Blocking of this pathway in the absence of sufficient preformed purines for salvage nucleotide synthesis led to cell death. Analogues of purine nucleobases and nucleosides taken up by the cells were cytotoxic, suggesting that salvage routes could be exploited for therapy. Adenine or hypoxanthine were able to substitute for catalase in supporting cell growth and proliferation, suggesting a role for these bases in maintaining the microaerophilic conditions essentially required by the bacterium. Received: 23 May 1997 / Accepted: 17 July 1997  相似文献   

12.
We studied the purine phosphoribosyltransferases (PRTases) of Escherichia coli and were able to isolate a mutant that is defective in its ability to convert guanine and xanthine to their respective ribonucleotides. The affected gene (gpt) lies between metD and proA and is 78.6% co-transducible with proA. Both this point mutant and a strain with a pro-lac deletion contain less than 2% of wild-type xanthine PRTase activity, yet still contain about 30% of wild-type guanine PRTase activity. Thus, the gpt gene is only one of at least two genes responsible for guanine PRTase activity in E. coli.  相似文献   

13.
We studied the ability of purine compounds to restore the proliferation of concanavalin-A-stimulated rat T-lymphocytes under conditions of purine de novo synthesis inhibition and, on the other hand, the inhibition by purine nucleosides of the response of these cells to a mitogenic stimulation under conditions of normal purine de novo synthesis. The use of 50 μM azaserine, a potent inhibitor of purine de novo synthesis, allowed us to define the physiologically active salvage pathways of purine bases, ribo- and deoxyribonucleosides in concanavalin-A-stimulated rat T-lymphocytes. Except for guanylic compounds, all purines completely restored cell proliferation at a concentration of 50 μM. Guanine, guanosine and 2′-deoxyguanosine at concentrations up to 500 μM did not allow us to restore more than 50% of the cell proliferation. In conditions of normal purine de novo synthesis, the addition of 1000 μM adenine, adenosine, 2′-deoxyadenosine or 100 μM 2′-deoxyguanosine inhibited rat T-lymphocyte proliferation. The differences between the degree of inhibition of cell proliferation could be explained only in part by the differences between the capacities of salvage of these compounds. Furthermore, the fact that 2′-deoxyguanosine toxicity was dependent and 2′-deoxyadenosine toxicity independent on the activation state of the cells provided more evidence that the biochemical mechanisms of inhibition of cell proliferation should be different for these two nucleosides.  相似文献   

14.
Plasmodium and other apicomplexan parasites are deficient in purine biosynthesis, relying instead on the salvage of purines from their host environment. Therefore, interference with the purine salvage pathway is an attractive therapeutic target. The plasmodial enzyme adenosine deaminase (ADA) plays a central role in purine salvage and, unlike mammalian ADA homologs, has a further secondary role in methylthiopurine recycling. For this reason, plasmodial ADA accepts a wider range of substrates, as it is responsible for deamination of both adenosine and 5′-methylthioadenosine. The latter substrate is not accepted by mammalian ADA homologs. The structural basis for this natural difference in specificity between plasmodial and mammalian ADA has not been well understood. We now report crystal structures of Plasmodium vivax ADA in complex with adenosine, guanosine, and the picomolar inhibitor 2′-deoxycoformycin. These structures highlight a drastic conformational change in plasmodial ADA upon substrate binding that has not been observed for mammalian ADA enzymes. Further, these complexes illuminate the structural basis for the differential substrate specificity and potential drug selectivity between mammalian and parasite enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
Xanthosine is a catabolite of purine nucleotides. Our studies using excised tissues of various plant species indicate that xanthosine salvage is negligible and that xanthosine is catabolised predominantly via xanthine. A recent report using intact Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings (Riegler et al., 2011. New Phytol. 191, 349–359) showed that significant amounts of xanthosine were utilised for RNA synthesis. We report here similar, more detailed 14C-feeding experiments of xanthosine and xanthine using intact mungbean seedlings. Less than 3% of radioactivity from [8-14C]xanthosine and 1% from [8-14C]xanthine was incorporated into the RNA fraction; the rest of the radioactivity was incorporated into purine catabolites, including ureides, urea and CO2. Allopurinol, which is a xanthine oxidoreductase inhibitor, markedly inhibited purine catabolism, and radioactivity from these two precursors was retained in xanthine. Even then, no significant salvage of xanthosine and xanthine was observed. Rapid catabolism and slow salvage of xanthosine and xanthine appear to be inherent properties of many plant species.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The interactions of Ni(II) cation with a representative suite of purine bases and the respective nucleosides and nucleotides have been studied by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy. Apparent association constants, Kapp, were determined for each system at pH 7.0, using computer linear regression coupled with an iteration technique. The specificity of binding of Ni2+ for the purine nucleotides studied at pH 7.0 was 5-GMP > 5-IMP > 5-AMP; a similiar ordering was also found for the respective nucleosides and bases. In this study binding was not observed for the suite of pyramidines used, although a Ni2+ - cytidine complex has been observed (Fiskin and Beer, 1965). It was also found that Ni2+ bound more strongly to the purine 5-nucleotides than to the respective nucleosides and bases. These trends are explained in terms of metal-ligand bonds and available bonding positions on the ligands. A role for metal-ion-nucleotide types of complexes is suggested in the processes that might have given rise to the origin of life.  相似文献   

17.
A sensitive and highly selective method for the simultaneous determination of purine bases and their nucleosides is proposed. An amperometric flow-injection system with the two immobilized enzyme reactors (guanase immobilized reactor and purine nucleoside phosphorylase/xanthine oxidase co-immobilized reactor) is used as the specific post-column detection system of HPLC, to convert compounds separated by a reversed-phase. HPLC column to electroactive species (hydrogen peroxide and uric acid) which can be detected at a flow-through platinum electrode. The proposed detection system is specific for a group of purine bases and purine nucleosides and does not respond for purine nucleotides and pyrimidine bases. The linear determination ranges are from 10 pmol to 5 nmol for four purine bases (hypoxanthine, xanthine, guanine, and adenine) and four purine nucleosides (inosine, xanthosine, guanosine, and adenosine). The detection limits are 1.2-5.5 pmol.  相似文献   

18.
Leishmania mexicana mexicana promastigotes, axenic amastigotes, and amastigotes derived from Vero cells were examined for de novo purine synthesis and mechanisms of purine salvage. Both promastigotes and axenic amastigotes were incapable of de novo purine synthesis, as shown by the lack of [14C]formate and [14C]glycine incorporation into purine nucleotide pools. However, the ready incorporation of [14C]hypoxanthine, [14C]adenine, and [14C]guanine suggested that purine salvage pathways were operating. In addition, a significant percentage (?60%) of the total label from these purine precursors was associated with adenylate nucleotides. Nucleotide pool levels of axenic amastigotes were consistently greater but the specific activities were less than those of promastigotes, suggesting a slower rate of purine metabolism in the axenic amastigote form. Similar results were obtained from amastigotes isolated from infected Vero cells.  相似文献   

19.
The pools of free ribose 1-phosphate and deoxyribose 1-phosphate have been measured in Bacillus cereus. It is shown that crude extracts of the same organism can actively utilize the sugar phosphates to convert adenine to ATP and deoxyATP, via a ‘salvage’ pathway, involving adenine ribosylation (or deoxyribosylation), followed by multiple phosphorylation steps. The biosynthetic pathway operates even in the presence of excess Pi, thus showing that purine nucleoside phosphorylases may function in vivo, contrary to what is generally assumed, as anabolic rather than catabolic enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Leishmania are auxotrophic for purines, and consequently purine acquisition from the host is a requisite nutritional function for the parasite. Both adenylosuccinate synthetase (ADSS) and adenylosuccinate lyase (ASL) have been identified as vital components of purine salvage in Leishmania donovani, and therefore Δadss and Δasl null mutants were constructed to test this hypothesis. Unlike wild type L. donovani, Δadss and Δasl parasites in culture exhibited a profoundly restricted growth phenotype in which the only permissive growth conditions were a 6-aminopurine source in the presence of 2′-deoxycoformycin, an inhibitor of adenine aminohydrolase activity. Although both knock-outs showed a diminished capacity to infect murine peritoneal macrophages, only the Δasl null mutant was profoundly incapacitated in its ability to infect mice. The enormous discrepancy in parasite loads observed in livers and spleens from mice infected with either Δadss or Δasl parasites can be explained by selective accumulation of adenylosuccinate in the Δasl knock-out and consequent starvation for guanylate nucleotides. Genetic complementation of a Δasl lesion in Escherichia coli implied that the L. donovani ASL could also recognize 5-aminoimidazole-(N-succinylocarboxamide) ribotide as a substrate, and purified recombinant ASL displayed an apparent Km of ∼24 μm for adenylosuccinate. Unlike many components of the purine salvage pathway of L. donovani, both ASL and ADSS are cytosolic enzymes. Overall, these data underscore the paramount importance of ASL to purine salvage by both life cycle stages of L. donovani and authenticate ASL as a potential drug target in Leishmania.  相似文献   

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