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1.
Thymidine incorporation in nucleoside transport-deficient lymphoma cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Nucleoside transport deficiency in mammalian cells is associated with an inability to transport most nucleosides, growth resistance to a spectrum of cytotoxic nucleosides, and a loss of binding sites for 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR), a potent inhibitor of nucleoside transport. The nucleoside transport-deficient S49 T lymphoma cell line, AE1, however, was almost as capable of incorporating thymidine into TTP as the wild type parent provided thymidine was administered at a sufficiently high concentration. Consequently, AE1 cells were just as sensitive as wild type cells to the toxicity of high thymidine concentrations. In contrast, AE1 cells were highly resistant to almost all other cytotoxic nucleosides including the thymidine analogs, 5-bromodeoxyuridine and 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate. Despite having demonstrable ability to accumulate TTP, AE1 cells were unable to grow on hypoxanthine-amethopterin-thymidine (HAT)-containing medium. This was due to their inability to accumulate sufficient TTP from the low concentrations of thymidine present in HAT medium. AE1 cells possessed an incomplete thymidine transport deficiency, the extent of which was concentration dependent. The residual capacity for thymidine transport present in AE1 cells was insensitive to inhibition by 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine and could account both for their inability to grow on HAT medium and their sensitivity to cytotoxic concentrations of thymidine. Another nucleoside transport-deficient cell line, FURD-80-3-6, was similar to the AE1 cell line in its growth phenotype and NBMPR-binding site deficiency but differed in its decreased growth sensitivity to thymidine. That nucleoside transport deficiencies may vary in their completeness for different nucleosides has significance for the mechanism by which a single transporter can recognize a wide variety of nucleosides.  相似文献   

2.
A novel type of somatic mutation that causes the expression of a high-affinity purine base permease (B. Aronow, D. Toll, J. Patrick, P. Hollingsworth, K. McCartan, and B. Ullmann, Mol. Cell Biol. 6:2957-2962, 1986) has been inserted into nucleoside transport-deficient S49 cells. Two classes of mutants expressing this nucleobase permease were generated. The first, as exemplified by the AE1HADPAB2 cell line, possessed an augmented capacity to transport low concentrations of the three purine bases, hypoxanthine, guanine, and adenine. The second class of mutants, as typified by the AE1HADPAB5 clone, possessed an augmented capability to translocate low levels of hypoxanthine and guanine, but not adenine. Neither the AE1HADPAB2 nor the AE1HADPAB5 cells could transport nucleosides, suggesting that the expression of the high-affinity base transporter did not reverse the mutation in the nucleoside transport system. The transport of purine bases by both AE1HADPAB2 and AE1HADPAB5 cells was much less sensitive than that by wild-type cells to inhibition by dipyridamole, 4-nitrobenzylthionosine, and N-ethylmaleimide, potent inhibitors of nucleoside and nucleobase transport in wild-type S49 cells. Fusion of the AE1HADPAB2 and AE1HADPAB5 cell lines with wild-type cells indicated that the expression of the high-affinity base transporter behaved in a dominant fashion, while the nucleoside transport deficiency was a recessive trait. These data suggest that the high-affinity purine base transporter of mutant cells and the nucleoside transport function of wild-type cells are products of different genes and that expression of the former probably requires the unmasking or alteration of a specific genetic locus that is silent or different in wild-type cells.  相似文献   

3.
From a mutagenized population of wild-type mouse (S49) T-lymphoma cells, a clone, 80-5D2, was isolated in a single step by virtue of its ability to survive in 80 nM 5-fluorouridine. Unlike previously isolated nucleoside transport-deficient cell lines (A. Cohen, B. Ullman, and D. W. Martin, Jr., J. Biol. Chem. 254:112-116, 1979), 80-5D2 cells were only slightly less sensitive to growth inhibition by a variety of cytotoxic nucleosides and were capable of proliferating in hypoxanthine-amethopterin-thymidine-containing medium. The molecular basis for the phenotype of 80-5D2 cells was incomplete deficiency in the ability of the mutant cells to translocate nucleosides across the plasma membrane. Interestingly, mutant cells were more capable than wild-type cells of transporting the nucleobase hypoxanthine. Residual transport of adenosine into 80-5D2 cells was just as sensitive to inhibition by nucleosides and more sensitive to inhibition by hypoxanthine than that in wild-type cells, indicating that the phenomena of ligand binding and translocation can be uncoupled genetically. The 80-5D2 cells lacked cell surface binding sites for the potent inhibitor of nucleoside transport p-nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR) and, consequently, were largely resistant to the physiological effects of NBMPR. However, the altered transporter retained its sensitivity to dipyridamole, another inhibitor of nucleoside transport. The biochemical phenotype of the 80-5D2 cell line supports the hypothesis that the determinants that comprise the nucleoside carrier site, the hypoxanthine carrier site, the NBMPR binding site, and the dipyridamole binding site of the nucleoside transport function of mouse S49 cells are genetically distinguishable.  相似文献   

4.
Nucleoside and nucleobase transport and metabolism were measured in ATP-depleted and normal Aedes albopictus mosquito cells (line C-7-10) by rapid kinetic techniques. The cells possess a facilitated diffusion system for nucleosides, which in its broad substrate specificity and kinetic properties resembles that present in many types of mammalian cells. The Michaelis-Menten constant for uridine transport at 28 degrees C is about 180 microM. However, the nucleoside transporter of the mosquito cells is resistant to inhibition by nmolar concentrations of nitrobenzylthioinosine and the cells lack high affinity nitrobenzylthioinosine binding sites. The cells also possess an adenine transporter, which is distinct from the nucleoside transporter. They lack, however, a hypoxanthine transport system and are deficient in hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase activity, which explains their failure to efficiently salvage hypoxanthine from the medium. The cells possess uridine and thymidine phosphorylase activities and, in contrast to cultured mammalian cells, efficiently convert uracil to nucleotides. An adenosine-resistant variant (CAE-3-6) of the C-7-10 cell line is devoid of significant nucleoside transport activity but transports adenine normally. Residual entry of various nucleosides into these cells and of hypoxanthine and cytosine into wild type and mutant cells is strictly non-mediated. The rate of permeation of various nucleosides and of hypoxanthine into the CAE-3-6 cells is related to their hydrophobicity. Uridine permeation into CAE-3-6 cells exhibits an activation energy of about 20 kcal/mol. At high uridine concentrations permeation is sufficiently rapid to partly overcome the limitation in nucleoside salvage imposed by the nucleoside transport defect in these cells.  相似文献   

5.
The single nucleoside transport function of mouse S49 lymphoblasts also transports purine bases (B. Aronow and B. Ullman, J. Biol. Chem. 261:2014-2019, 1986). This transport of purine bases by S49 cells is sensitive to inhibition by dipyridamole (DPA) and 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine, two potent inhibitors of nucleoside transport. Therefore, wild-type S49 cells cannot salvage low hypoxanthine concentrations in the presence of 10 microM DPA and 11 microM azaserine; the latter is a potent inhibitor of purine biosynthesis. Among a mutagenized wild-type population, a cell line, JPA2, was isolated which could proliferate in 50 microM hypoxanthine-11 microM azaserine-10 microM DPA. The basis for the survival of JPA2 cells under these selective conditions was expression of a unique, high-affinity purine nucleobase transport function not present in wild-type cells. JPA2 cells could transport 5 microM concentrations of hypoxanthine, guanine, and adenine 15- to 30-fold more efficiently than parental cells did. Kinetic analyses revealed that the affinity of the JPA2 transporter for all three purine bases was much greater than that of the wild-type nucleobase transport system. Moreover, nucleobase transport in JPA2 cells, unlike that in parental cells, was insensitive to inhibition by DPA, 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine, sulfhydryl reagents, and nucleosides. No alterations in nucleoside transport capability, phosphoribosylpyrophosphate levels, or purine phosphoribosyltransferase enzymes were detected in JPA2 cells. Thus, JPA2 cells express a novel nucleobase transport capability which can be distinguished from the nucleoside transport function by multiple biochemical parameters.  相似文献   

6.
A mutant clone (AU-100) which is 90% deficient in adenylosuccinate synthetase activity was characterized from wild-type murine S49 T-lymphoma cells. This AU-100 cell line and its hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient derivative, AUTG-50B, overproduce purines severalfold and excrete massive amounts of inosine into the culture medium (Ullman et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79:5127-5131, 1982). We introduced a mutation into both of these cell lines which make them incapable of taking up nucleosides from the culture medium. The genetic deficiency in nucleoside transport prevents the adenylosuccinate synthetase-deficient AU-100 cells from excreting inosine. Because of an extremely efficient intracellular inosine salvage system, the nucleoside transport-deficient AU-100 cells also no longer overproduce purines. AUTG-50B cells which have been made genetically deficient in nucleoside transport still overproduce purines but excrete hypoxanthine rather than inosine. These studies demonstrate genetically that nucleoside transport and nucleoside efflux share a common component and that nucleoside transport has an important regulatory function which profoundly affects the rates of purine biosynthesis and purine salvage.  相似文献   

7.
The uptake of various nucleosides by S49 mouse T-lymphoma cells and that by a single-step nucleoside transport-defective mutant thereof (AE1) were compared. Residual nucleoside entry into AE1 cells occurred via two routes, nonmediated permeation and saturable, non-concentrative transport with broad substrate specificity and a Michaelis-Menten constant approximating that for thymidine transport in wild-type cells. However, in contrast to nucleoside transport in wild-type cells, residual nucleoside transport in AE1 cells was resistant to inhibition by nitrobenzylthioinosine. In its properties the latter resembled nitrobenzylthioinosine-resistant nucleoside transport observed in other types of mammalian cells. It amounted to less than 1% of the total nucleoside transport activity of wild-type S49 cells. The results indicate that nitrobenzylthioinosine-resistant and -sensitive nucleoside transports are genetically distinguishable. In wild-type cells, the salvage of thymidine, when present at concentrations higher than 1 to 10 microM, was limited by phosphorylation, because of the saturation of thymidine kinase. In AE1 cells, entry into the cells mainly limited thymidine salvage, but at high thymidine concentrations the combined entry via residual transport and nonmediated permeation was sufficiently rapid to support intracellular thymidine phosphorylation at rates comparable to those observed in wild-type cells.  相似文献   

8.
Characterization of mouse lymphoma cells with altered nucleoside transport   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A mutant clone (NT-1) of a T-cell lymphoma was selected for its ability to grow in HAT medium (hypoxanthine, aminopterin and thymidine) in the presence of the nucleoside transport inhibitor P-nitrobenzyl-6-mercaptoinosine (NBMI). NT-1 cells contain half the number of NBMI binding sites present on the parental S49 cells and are partially able to transport nucleosides in the presence of the transport inhibitor (NBMI). These observations suggest that the mutant cells are heterozygous for nucleoside transport proteins and contain two types of transport proteins: the first protein can both bind and is inhibited by NBMI similar to the wild type phenotype, and the second is an altered protein. The altered transport protein apparently lost its NBMI binding sites without a parallel loss of nucleoside transport ability suggesting that the nucleoside transported sites are separate from the binding sites of the transport inhibitor.  相似文献   

9.
In order to analyze the cellular determinants that mediate the action of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine, the growth inhibitory and cytotoxic effects and the metabolism of the dideoxynucleoside were examined in wild type human CEM T lymphoblasts and in mutant populations of CEM cells that were genetically deficient in either nucleoside transport or deoxycytidine kinase activity. Whereas 2',3'-dideoxycytidine at a concentration of 5 microM inhibited growth of the wild type CEM parental strain by 50%, two nucleoside transport-deficient clones were 4-fold resistant to the pyrimidine analog. The deoxycytidine kinase-deficient cell line was virtually completely resistant to growth inhibition by the dideoxynucleoside at a concentration of 1024 microM. An 80% diminished rate of 2',3'-[5,6-3H]dideoxycytidine influx into the two nucleoside transport-deficient lines could account for their resistance to the dideoxynucleoside, while the resistance of the deoxycytidine kinase-deficient cells to 2',3'-dideoxycytidine toxicity could be explained by a virtually complete failure to incorporate 2',3'-[5,6-3H]dideoxycytidine in situ. Two potent inhibitors of mammalian nucleoside transport, 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine and dipyridamole, mimicked the effects of a genetic deficiency in nucleoside transport with respect to 2',3'-dideoxycytidine toxicity and incorporation. These data indicate that the intracellular metabolism of 2',3'-dideoxycytidine in CEM cells is initiated by the nucleoside transport system and the cellular deoxycytidine kinase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Plasmodium falciparum is incapable of de novo purine biosynthesis, and is absolutely dependent on transporters to salvage purines from the environment. Only one low-affinity adenosine transporter has been characterized to date. In the present study we report a comprehensive study of purine nucleobase and nucleoside transport by intraerythrocytic P. falciparum parasites. Isolated trophozoites expressed (i) a high-affinity hypoxanthine transporter with a secondary capacity for purine nucleosides, (ii) a separate high-affinity transporter for adenine, (iii) a low-affinity adenosine transporter, and (iv) a low-affinity/high-capacity adenine carrier. Hypoxanthine was taken up with 12-fold higher efficiency than adenosine. Using a parasite clone with a disrupted PfNT1 (P. falciparum nucleoside transporter 1) gene we found that the high-affinity hypoxanthine/nucleoside transport activity was completely abolished, whereas the low-affinity adenosine transport activity was unchanged. Adenine transport was increased, presumably to partly compensate for the loss of the high-affinity hypoxanthine transporter. We thus propose a model for purine salvage in P. falciparum, based on the highly efficient uptake of hypoxanthine by PfNT1 and a high capacity for purine nucleoside uptake by a lower affinity carrier.  相似文献   

11.
From a mutagenized population of wild type S49 T lymphoma cells, clones were generated that were resistant to the physiological effects of the potent inhibitor of nucleoside transport, 4-nitrobenzyl-6-thioinosine (NBMPR). These cells were selected for their ability to survive in semisolid medium containing 0.5 mM hypoxanthine, 0.4 microM methotrexate, 30 microM thymidine, 30 microM deoxycytidine, in the presence of 30 microM NBMPR. NBMPR protected wild type cells from the effects of a spectrum of cytotoxic nucleosides, whereas two mutant clones, KAB1 and KAB5, were still sensitive to nucleoside-mediated cytotoxicity in the presence of NBMPR. Comparisons of the abilities of wild type cells and mutant cells to incorporate exogenous nucleoside to the corresponding nucleoside triphosphate indicated that the KAB1 and KAB5 mutant cells were refractory to normal inhibition by NBMPR. Moreover, rapid transport studies indicated that mutant cells, unlike wild type parental cells, had acquired a substantial NBMPR-insensitive nucleoside transport component. Binding studies with [3H]NBMPR indicated that KAB5 cells were 70-75% deficient in the number of NBMPR binding sites, whereas KAB1 cells possessed a wild type complement of NBMPR binding sites. These data suggest that the NBMPR binding site in wild type S49 cells is genetically distinguishable from the nucleoside carrier site.  相似文献   

12.
From a mutagenized population of S49 murine T lymphoma cells, a mutant cell line, JPA4, was selected that expressed an altered nucleoside transport capability. JPA4 cells transported low concentrations of purine nucleosides and uridine more rapidly than the parental S49 cell line. The transport of these nucleosides by mutant cells was insensitive to inhibition by either dipyridamole (DPA) or 4-nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR), two potent inhibitors of nucleoside transport in mammalian cells. Kinetic analyses revealed that the apparent Km values for the transport of uridine, adenosine, and inosine were 3-4-fold lower in JPA4 cells compared to wild type cells. In contrast, the transport of both thymidine and cytidine by JPA4 cells was similar to that of parental cells, and transport of these pyrimidine nucleosides remained sensitive to inhibition by both NBMPR and DPA. Furthermore, thymidine was a 10-12-fold weaker inhibitor of inosine transport in JPA4 cells than in wild type cells. Thus, JPA4 cells appeared to express two types of nucleoside transport activities; a novel (mutant) type that was insensitive to inhibition by DPA and NBMPR and transported purine nucleosides and uridine, and a parental type that retained sensitivity to inhibitors and transported cytidine and thymidine. The phenotype of the JPA4 cell line suggests that the sensitivity of mammalian nucleoside transporters to both NBMPR and DPA can be genetically uncoupled from its ability to transport certain nucleoside substrates and that the determinants on the nucleoside transporter that interact with each nucleoside are not necessarily identical.  相似文献   

13.
S49 mouse lymphoma cells are deficient in hypoxanthine transport   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The rate of uptake of hypoxanthine in S49 cells was only about 2-5% of the rate of hypoxanthine transport observed in many other types of mammalian cells, and of the rate of uridine transport in this and other cell types. Part of the slow entry of hypoxanthine seems to be due to non-mediated permeation, but the remainder is saturable, strongly inhibited by uridine, nitrobenzylthioinosine and dipyridamole and not detectable in a nucleoside-transport-deficient mutant of S49 cells (AE1). The inhibition of hypoxanthine transport in S49 cells by nitrobenzylthioinosine resembles the inhibition of nucleoside transport in these and other mammalian cells, whereas it contrasts with the resistance of hypoxanthine transport to nitrobenzylthioinosine in all types of mammalian cells that have been investigated. We conclude that S49 cells lack the hypoxanthine transport system common to other types of cells and that hypoxanthine entry into these cells is mediated, although very inefficiently, by the nucleoside transporter. In contrast, adenine transport in S49 and AE1 cells was comparable to that in other types of cells.  相似文献   

14.
L1210 mouse leukemia cells exhibit two distinct types of nucleoside transport activity that have similar kinetic properties and substrate specificity, but differ markedly in their sensitivity to the inhibitor nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR) (Belt, J. A. (1983) Mol. Pharmacol. 24, 479-484). It is not known whether these two transport activities are mediated by a single protein or by separate and distinct nucleoside transport proteins. We have isolated a mutant from the L1210 cell line that has lost the NBMPR-insensitive component of nucleoside transport, but retains NBMPR-sensitive transport. In the parental cell line 20-40% of the nucleoside transport activity is insensitive to 1 microM NBMPR. In the mutant, however, uridine and thymidine transport are almost completely inhibited by NBMPR. Consistent with the loss of NBMPR-insensitive transport, the mutant cells can be protected from the toxic effects of several nucleoside analogs by NBMPR. In contrast, the toxicity of the same analogs in the wild type cells is not significantly affected by NBMPR, presumably due to uptake of the nucleosides via the NBMPR-insensitive transporter. On the other hand, NBMPR-sensitive transport in the mutant appears to be unaltered. The mutant is not resistant to cytotoxic nucleosides in the absence of NBMPR and the cells retain the wild type complement of high affinity binding sites for NBMPR. Furthermore, the affinity of the binding site for the inhibitor is similar to that of parental L1210 cells. These results suggest that NBMPR-sensitive and NBMPR-insensitive nucleoside transport in L1210 cells are mediated by genetically distinct proteins. To our knowledge this is the first report of a mutant deficient in NBMPR-insensitive nucleoside transport.  相似文献   

15.
Rapid kinetic techniques were used to study the transport and salvage of uridine and other nucleosides in mouse spleen cells. Spleen cells express two nucleoside transport systems: (1) the non-concentrative, symmetrical, Na+-independent transporter with broad substrate specificity, which has been found in all mammalian cells and is sensitive to inhibition by dipyridamole and nitrobenzylthioinosine; and (2) a Na+-dependent nucleoside transport, which is specific for uridine and purine nucleosides and resistant to inhibition by dipyridamole and nitrobenzylthioinosine. The kinetic properties of the two transporters were determined by measuring uridine influx in ATP-depleted cells and dipyridamole-treated cells, respectively. The Michaelis-Menten constants for Na+-independent and -dependent transport were about 40 and 200 microM, respectively, but the first-order rate constants were about the same for both transport systems. Nitrobenzylthioinosine-sensitivity of the facilitated nucleoside transporter correlated with the presence of about 10,000 high-affinity (Kd = 0.6 nM) nitrobenzylthioinosine-binding sites per cell. The turnover number of the nitrobenzylthioinosine-sensitive nucleoside transporter was comparable to that of mouse P388 leukemia cells. The activation energy of this transporter was 20 kcal/mol. Entry of uridine via either of the transport routes was rapidly followed by its phosphorylation and conversion to UTP. The Michaelis-Menten constant for the in situ phosphorylation of uridine was about 50 microM and the first-order rate constants for phosphorylation and transport were about the same. The spleen cells also efficiently salvaged adenosine, adenine, and hypoxanthine, but not thymidine.  相似文献   

16.
Adenine, guanine, and hypoxanthine were rapidly incorporated into the acid-soluble nucleotide pool and nucleic acids by wild type Novikoff cells. Incorporation followed normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics, but the following evidence indicates that specific transport processes precede the phosphoribosyltransferase reactions and are the rate-limiting step in purine incorporation by whole cells. Cells of an azaguanine-resistant subline of Novikoff cells which lacked hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase activity and failed to incorporate guanine or hypoxanthine into the nucleotide pool, exhibited uptake of guanine and hypoxanthine by a saturable process. Similarly, wild type cells which had been preincubated in a glucose-free basal medium containing KCN and iodoacetate transported guanine and hypoxanthine normally, although a conversion of these purines to nucleotides did not occur in these cells. The mutant and KCN-iodoacetate treated wild type cells also exhibited countertransport of guanine and hypoxanthine when preloaded with various purines, uracil, and pyrimidine nucleosides. The cells also possess a saturable transport system for uracil although they lack phosphoribosyltransferase activity for uracil. In the absence of phosphoribosylation, none of the substrates was accumulated against a concentration gradient. Thus transport is by facilitated diffusion (nonconcentrative transport). Furthermore, the apparent Km values for purine uptake by untreated wild type and azaguanine-resistant cells were higher and the apparent Vmax values were lower than those for the corresponding phosphoribosyltransferases...  相似文献   

17.
A mutant cell line was selected from wild type S49 lymphoblasts that expressed a novel high affinity purine base transport system not found in parental cells or any other mammalian cell line (Aronow, B., Toll, D., Patrick, J., Hollingsworth, P., McCartan, K., and Ullman, B. (1986) Mol. Cell. Biol. 6, 2957-2962). In order to determine whether this nucleobase transport system was bidirectional, mutant cell lines possessing this high affinity base transport capability were derived from a nucleoside transport-deficient derivative of an adenylosuccinate synthetase-deficient S49 cell line. The resulting progeny excreted significantly greater amounts of purine into the cell culture medium than parental cells. This purine was identified as hypoxanthine. These results demonstrate genetically that the high affinity purine base transport system can mediate both the influx and efflux of hypoxanthine.  相似文献   

18.
From a mutagenized population of wild-type S49 T lymphoblasts, cells were selected for their ability to survive in semisolid medium containing 0.5 mM hypoxanthine, 0.4 microM methotrexate, 30 microM thymidine, 30 microM deoxycytidine, and 30 microM p-nitrobenzyl-6-thioinosine (NBMPR), a potent inhibitor of nucleoside transport. Unlike wild-type parental cells, two mutant clones, KAB1 and KAB5, were still sensitive to nucleoside-mediated cytotoxicity in the presence of NBMPR. Comparisons of the abilities of wild-type cells, KAB1, and KAB5 cells to incorporate exogenous nucleoside to the corresponding nucleoside triphosphate indicated that nucleoside incorporation was much less sensitive to inhibition by NBMPR in the mutant cells. Rapid transport studies indicated that the mutant cell lines, unlike the wild-type parent, had acquired an NBMPR-insensitive nucleoside transport component which was similar to the NBMPR-sensitive wild-type transporter with respect to affinities for nucleosides and sensitivities toward N-ethylmaleimide and dipyridamole. Binding studies with [3H]NBMPR indicated that KAB5 cells were 70-75% deficient in the number of NBMPR binding sites, whereas KAB1 cells possessed a wild-type complement of NBMPR binding sites with wild-type binding characteristics. These data suggest that the NBMPR binding site in wild-type S49 cells is genetically distinguishable from the nucleoside carrier site and that the former may be a regulatory site.  相似文献   

19.
ABSTRACT

Using Caco-2 cells and our previously developed high-performance liquid chromatography method for quantification of purine bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides, we evaluated cellular purine transport and uptake. The analytes were separated using YMC-Triart C18 column with gradient elution. We used Caco-2 cells as intestinal model cells and monitored purine transport across a monolayer for 2 h. The degree of change of purine concentrations in the permeate was very slight; however, it was possible to simultaneously determine these parameters for all purines because of our method's high sensitivity. In the present study, the purine bases (adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, and xanthine) showed a relatively high permeability as compared with the nucleosides (adenosine, guanosine, inosine, and xanthosine). Increased concentration of metabolites in the permeate was also observed following the addition of purines. In a cell uptake assay, both the cell culture medium (extracellular) and the cells extracted from Caco-2 with acetonitrile:water (7:3) (intracellular) were measured. The additional nucleoside did not increase significantly within the cells. On the other hand, we observed that nucleotide, such as ATP, increased in the cell in a time-dependent manner following the addition of nucleoside. The additional nucleosides were considered to be rather recycled via the salvage pathway than metabolized to purine bases and/or uric acid in the cell. Such differences might have affected the increase in the serum uric acid levels depending on purine form.  相似文献   

20.
Nucleoside transport was examined in freshly isolated mouse intestinal epithelial cells. The uptake of formycin B, the C nucleoside analog of inosine, was concentrative and required extracellular sodium. The initial rate of sodium-dependent formycin B transport was saturable with a Km of 45 +/- 3 microM. The purine nucleosides adenosine, inosine, guanosine, and deoxyadenosine were all good inhibitors of sodium-dependent formycin B transport with 50% inhibition (IC50) observed at concentrations less than 30 microM. Of the pyrimidine nucleosides examined, only uridine (IC50, 41 +/- 9 microM) was a good inhibitor. Thymidine and cytidine were poor inhibitors with IC50 values greater than 300 microM. Direct measurements of [3H]thymidine transport revealed, however, that the uptake of this nucleoside was also mediated by a sodium-dependent mechanism. Thymidine transport was inhibited by low concentrations of cytidine, uridine, adenosine, and deoxyadenosine (IC50 values less than 25 microM), but not by formycin B, inosine, or guanosine (IC50 values greater than 600 microM). These data indicate that there are two sodium-dependent mechanisms for nucleoside transport in mouse intestinal epithelial cells, and that formycin B and thymidine may serve as model substrates to distinguish between these transporters. Neither of these sodium-dependent transport mechanisms was inhibited by nitrobenzylmercaptopurine riboside (10 microM), a potent inhibitor of one of the equilibrative (facilitated diffusion) nucleoside transporters found in many cells.  相似文献   

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