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1.
Leishmania donovani grew in the chemostat on proline as its sole carbon and energy source at a maximum growth rate of 1.39 divisions per day. The efficiency of proline metabolism decreased with increasing external proline concentration. The internal concentration of proline and its intracellular metabolites was low when proline was the growth rate limiting substrate and high when proline was available in excess. In time-course experiments proline uptake leveled off after 30 min, independent of the culture conditions prior to the experiment. Proline uptake depended on the external proline concentration in a manner that is best described as the combination of an enzymatic and a diffusion component. Adaptation to different proline concentrations did not occur and no evidence was found that proline is actively transported by L. donovani.  相似文献   

2.
Cultures of the insect stage of the protozoan parasites Leishmania donovani and Trypanosoma brucei were grown in chemostats with glucose as the growth rate-limiting substrate. L. donovani has a maximum specific growth rate (mu max) of 1.96 day-1 and a Ks for glucose of 0.1 mM; the mu max of T. brucei is 1.06 day-1 and the Ks is 0.06 mM. At each steady state (specific growth rate, mu, equals D, the dilution rate), the following parameters were measured: external glucose concentration (Glcout), cell density, dry weight, protein, internal glucose concentration (Glcin), cellular ATP level, and hexokinase activity. L. donovani shows a relationship between mu and yield that allows an estimation of the maintenance requirement (ms) and the yield per mole of ATP (YATP). Both the ms and the YATP are on the higher margin of the range found for prokaryotes grown on glucose in a complex medium. L. donovani maintains the Glcin at a constant level of about 50 mM as long as it is not energy depleted. T. brucei has a decreasing yield with increasing mu, suggesting that it oxidizes its substrate to a lesser extent at higher growth rates. Glucose is not concentrated internally but is taken up by facilitated diffusion, while phosphorylation by hexokinase is probably the rate-limiting step for glucose metabolism. The Ks is constant as long as glucose is the rate-limiting substrate. The results of this study demonstrate that L. donovani and T. brucei have widely different metabolic strategies for dealing with varying external conditions, which reflect the conditions they are likely to encounter in their respective insect hosts.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of salt on proline uptake in a moderately halophilic halotolerant bacterium was studied. Cells were grown either on low salt or high salt media. A correlation was found between the salt concentrations in the growth media and the optimal concentration for uptake. The uptake rate was stimulated 2--3-fold by NaCl, as compared to KCl. The Km, V and activation energies values for proline uptake, as well as the external pH effect, were similar in low-salt-grown cells and high-salt-grown cells. This suggests that the halotolerance of the transport system is not due to alterations of the system during growth at various conditions, but rather to its intrinsic ability to function under extreme environmental conditions. The uptake was inhibited by cyanide and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, but not by arsenate, indicating that the electrochemical proton gradient (delta mu- H+), generated by respiration, is the main driving force for proline transport. In low-salt-grown cells, at pH 6.0, partial inhibition was exerted by nigericin or valinomycin, whereas at pH 8.0 the uptake was inhibited by valinomycin only. Similar, although less pronounced effects were found in high-salt-grown cells. The data suggest that at pH 6.0 proline transport is driven by delta mu- H+ (composed of electrical potential (delta psi) and pH gradient), whereas at pH 8.0 delta psi is the main driving force. Procedures of pretreatment with EDTA were developed to enable the penetration of the ionophores into the cells.  相似文献   

4.
Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease, uses proline as its main carbon source, essential for parasite growth and stage differentiation in epimastigotes and amastigotes. Since proline is mainly obtained from extracellular medium by transport proteins, in this work we studied the regulation of the T. cruzi proline transporter TcAAAP069. Proline uptake and intracellular concentration presented oscillations during epimastigote growth phases, increasing during the early exponential phase (322 pmol/min) and decreasing to undetectable levels during the late exponential phase. Transporter expression rate correlated with proline uptake, and its subcellular localization alternated from both, the plasma membrane and close to the flagellar pocket, when the transport is higher, to only the flagellar pocket region, when the transport decreased until proline uptake and TcAAAP069 protein became undetectable at the end of the growth curve. Interestingly, when parasites were treated with conditioned medium or were concentrated to artificially increase the culture density, the proline transport was completely abolished resembling the effects observed in late exponential phase. These data highlight for the first time the existence of a density‐associated regulation of relevant physiological processes such as proline metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
Proline accumulation in Escherichia coli is mediated by three proline porters. Proline catabolism is effected by proline porter I (PPI) and proline/delta 1-pyrroline carboxylate dehydrogenase. Proline did not accumulate cytoplasmically when E. coli was subjected to osmotic stress in minimal salts medium. Although PPI is induced when proline is provided as carbon or nitrogen source, its activity decreased following growth of the bacteria in minimal salts medium of high osmotic strength. Proline dehydrogenase was induced by proline in low or high osmotic strength media. Proline porter II (PPII) was both activated and induced in osmotically stressed bacteria, though the dependencies of the two responses on medium osmolarity differed. Osmotic downshift during the transport measurement decreased the uptake of proline, serine and glutamine by bacteria cultured in media of high osmotic strength. Thus, while osmotic upshift caused specific activation of PPII, osmotic downshift caused a non-specific reduction in amino acid uptake. Glycine betaine inhibited the uptake of [14C]proline via PPII and PPIII but not via PPI. The dependence of that inhibition on glycine betaine concentration was similar when PPII was uninduced, induced or activated by osmotic stress, or induced by amino acid limited growth. Thus PPII and PPIII, not PPI, contribute to the mechanism of osmoprotection by proline and glycine betaine. The tendency for exogenous proline to accumulate in the cytoplasm of bacteria exposed to osmotic stress would, however, be countered by increased proline catabolism.  相似文献   

6.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, proline is a stress protectant interacting with other substrate uptake systems against oxidative stress under low pH conditions. In this study, we performed metabolomics analysis to investigate the response associated with an increase in cell growth rates and maximum densities when cells were treated with proline under normal and acid stress conditions. Metabolome data show that concentrations of components of central metabolism are increased in proline-treated S. cerevisiae. No consumption of proline was observed, suggesting that proline does not act as a nutrient but regulates metabolic state and growth of cells. Treatment of lactic acid-producing yeast with proline during lactic acid bio-production improved growth rate and increased the final concentration of lactic acid.  相似文献   

7.
Bacteria respond to changes in medium osmolarity by varying the concentrations of specific solutes in order to maintain constant turgor pressure. The cytoplasmic pools of K+, proline, glutamate, alanine, and glycine of Lactobacillus plantarum ATCC 14917 increased when the osmolarity of the growth media was raised from 0.20 to 1.51 osmol/kg by KCL. When glycine-betaine was present in a high-osmolarity chemically defined medium, it was accumulated to a high cytoplasmic concentration, while the concentrations of most other osmotically important solutes decreased. These observations, together with the effects of glycine-betaine on the specific growth rate under high-osmolarity conditions, suggest that glycine-betaine is preferentially accumulated in L. plantarum. Uptake of glycine-betaine, proline, glutamate, and alanine was studied in cells that were alternately exposed to hyper- and hypo-osmotic stresses. The rate of uptake of proline and glycine-betaine increased instantaneously upon increasing the osmolarity, whereas that of other amino acids did not. This activation occurred also under conditions in which protein synthesis was inhibited was most pronounced when cells were pregrown at high osmolarity. The duration of net transport was a function of the osmotic strength of the assay medium. Glutamate uptake was not activated by an osmotic upshock, and the uptake of alanine was low under all conditions tested. When cells were subjected to osmotic downshock, a rapid efflux of accumulated glycine-betaine, proline, and alanine occurred whereas the pools of other amin acids remained unaffected. The results indicate that osmolyte efflux is, at least to some extent, mediated via specific osmotically regulated efflux systems and not via nonspecific mechanisms as has been suggested previously.  相似文献   

8.
Leishmania tropica promastigotes transport L-proline through an active uptake system that has saturation kinetics, temperature dependence, a requirement for metabolic energy and transport against a concentration gradient. In experiments lasting 10 min, less than 10% of the proline transported is incorporated into macromolecules. The remainder is largely unaltered proline with an intracellular concentration nearly 60 times that in the reaction mixture. The uptake system has a relatively broad specificty; it is competitively inhibited by D-proline as well as by alanine, methionine, valine, azetidine-2-carboxylate, thioproline, 3,4-dehydropoline, hydroxyproline and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid. Pre-established intracellular proline pools exchange with external proline as well as compounds that compete with it for uptake. Evidence is presented that feedback inhibition and transinhibition may regulate proline uptake in this organism.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. Regulation of the concentration of osmotic solutes was studied in Chlorella emersonii grown at external osmotic pressures (II) ranging between 0.08 and 1.64MPa. NaCl was used as osmoticum. The total solute content of the cells was manipulated by applying 2 mol m−3 3- O -methylglucose (MG), which was not metabolized, and accumulated at concentrations ranging between 60 and 230 mol m−3 within 4 h after its addition to the medium. Methylglucose uptake resulted in decreases in concentrations of proline and sucrose, the two solutes mainly responsible for osmotic adaptation of C. emersonii to high external II. The responses were consistent with the hypothesis that proline and sucrose concentrations are controlled by a system of osmotic regulation, with turgor and/or volume as a primary signal. Short-term experiments showed that even very small increases in turgor and/or volume, due to accumulation of methylglucose, resulted in large decreases in proline and sucrose. Over the first 30-60 min the total solute concentration in the cells increased by at most 15 osmol m−3 which would represent an increase in turgor pressure of at most 0.04 M Pa. Yet, the decreases in proline and sucrose were as fast as those in cells exposed to a sudden decrease of 0.25 MPa in external II, when the turgor pressure would have increased by at least 0.15 MPa. High concentrations of methylglucose in cells grown at high II did not affect the rapid synthesis of proline and sucrose which started when the cells were transferred to yet higher II. Thus, methylglucose had no direct effects on proline and sucrose metabolism, and it has been assumed that it acted solely as an inert osmotic solute within the cell.  相似文献   

10.
This paper investigates the effects of uptake of nitrate and the availability of internal N reserves on growth rate in times of restricted supply, and examines the extent to which the response is mediated by the different pools of N (nitrate N, organic N and total N) in the plant. Hydroponic experiments were carried out with young lettuce plants (Lactuca sativa L.) to compare responses to either an interruption in external N supply or the imposition of different relative N addition rate (RAR) treatments. The resulting relationships between whole plant relative growth rate (RGR) and N concentration varied between linear and curvilinear (or possibly bi-linear) forms depending on the treatment conditions. The relationship was curvilinear when the external N supply was interrupted, but linear when N was supplied by either RAR methods or as a supra-optimal external N supply. These differences resulted from the ability of the plant to use external sources of N more readily than their internal N reserves. These results show that when sub-optimal sources of external N were available, RGR was maintained at a rate which was dependent on the rate of nitrate uptake by the roots. Newly acquired N was channelled directly to the sites of highest demand, where it was assimilated rapidly. As a result, nitrate only tended to accumulate in plant tissues when its supply was essentially adequate. By comparison, plants forced to rely solely on their internal reserves were never able to mobilize and redistribute N between tissues quickly enough to prevent reductions in growth rate as their tissue N reserves declined. Evidence is presented to show that the rate of remobilization of N depends on the size and type of the N pools within the plant, and that changes in their rates of remobilization and/or transfer between pools are the main factors influencing the form of the relationship between RGR and N concentration.  相似文献   

11.
Leishmania tropica promastigotes transport L-proline through an active uptake system that has saturation kinetics, temperature dependence, a requirement for metabolic energy and transport against a concentration gradient. In experiments lasting 10 min, less than 10% of the proline transported is incorporated into macromolecules. The remainder is largely unaltered proline with an intracellular concentration nearly 60 times that in the reaction mixture. The uptake system has a relatively broad specificity; it is competitively inhibited by D-proline as well as by alanine, methionine, valine, azetidine-2–carboxylate, thioproline, 3,4–dehydroproline, hydroxyproline and α-aminoisobutyric acid. Pre-established intracellular proline pools exchange with external proline as well as compounds that compete with it for uptake. Evidence is presented that feedback inhibition and transinhibition may regulate proline uptake in this organism.  相似文献   

12.
Leishmania donovani are the causative agents of kala azar in humans. These organisms cycle between the proline-rich environment of the sand fly vector (extracellular promastigotes) and the sugar-rich condition in the mammalian host (intracellular amastigotes). Parasites have adapted to these extreme changes in proline concentrations: promastigotes utilize proline as a carbon source, whereas amastigotes utilize sugars and fatty acids. Previous studies have suggested that promastigotes and amastigotes express distinct proline transporters. However, the information available on these transporters is limited. In this work, proline transport was investigated in axenic L. donovani cultures. Three transport systems were identified: cation-dependent and -independent proline transporters in promastigotes (systems A and B, respectively) and a single cation-independent transporter in amastigotes (system C). Systems A and C have broad specificity to almost all amino acids and obtain optimum activity at acidic pH ranges (pH 6 and 5, respectively). System B is more specific to proline, as it is inhibited by only five amino acids. Temperature response analyses indicated that the transporters of both promastigotes and amastigotes perform best at 37 degrees C. The activity of system A during parasite differentiation was assessed. The transport activity of system A disappeared 3 days after promastigotes were induced to differentiate into amastigotes. In these cells, elevated temperature and acidic pH each suppressed the activity of system A. When amastigotes were induced to differentiate back into promastigotes, system A resumed its activity 24 h after differentiation was initiated. In conclusion, L. donovani obtain proline transport systems that are stage specific, regulated by both pH and temperature. This paper constitutes the first investigation of amino acid transport in axenic L. donovani.  相似文献   

13.
The relation between plant yield and plant nutrient concentration is sometimes found to be negative, a phenomenon called the Piper-Steenbjerg (PS) effect. A model was used to examine the underlying causes of the PS effect, and the conditions under which it is most likely to occur. The model uses the nutrient productivity concept for plant growth and a nutrient uptake equation in which root growth rate and external nutrient concentration determine the uptake rate. The study suggests that the PS effect occurs when the fast growth of plants grown in an initially higher nutrient medium eventually leads to a more rapid depletion of external nutrients than the slow growth of plants grown in an initially lower nutrient medium. The fast growth of plants combined with a rapid decrease of nutrient uptake leads to a fall in plant nutrient concentration. When these large plants with very low nutrient concentrations are compared with the smaller, slow-growing plants, a PS effect may be found depending on the time at which the plants are harvested, and on the range of initial values of the external nutrient content. When it occurs, the effect is greatest when the depletion volume per unit new root (Vd) is lowest, and when the mobility of nutrients in the medium is highest (α=1). The results are sufficiently general to apply to a variety of nutrients, plant species and growth media.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetics of Growth and Substrate Uptake in a Biological Film System   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The rates of growth and substrate uptake in a biological film continuous-flow reactor were studied. The experiments were performed with high fluid velocities to bring the reactor operation to the reaction-controlled regime, thus avoiding external diffusional resistances. The glucose uptake experiments were performed with small film thicknesses so that full substrate penetration within the entire film thickness could be obtained. In this way, the catalyst effectiveness factor was 1.0 and the observed rate was the true, or intrinsic, rate. The results of the experiments indicate that both the intrinsic rate of substrate uptake and the rate of film growth are independent of the substrate concentration remaining in the reactor (zero-order reactions). However, the value of the initial substrate concentration when the film is in the early stages of growth defines the magnitude of both the rate of uptake and growth. This effect of the initial substrate concentration follows a saturation-function pattern.  相似文献   

15.
A pot experiment was carried out under glasshouse conditions with melon (Cucumis melo) cv. “Tempo F1” in a mixture of peat, perlite and sand (1:1:1) to investigate the effects of external proline and potassium nitrate applications to salinity-treated (150 mM) plants with respect to fruit yield, plant growth, some physiological parameters and ion uptake. Treatments were—(i) control (C): plants receiving nutrient solution, (ii) salinity treatment, as for control plus 150 mM NaCl. Salinity treatment was combined with or without either 5 mM supplementary KNO3 or 10 mM proline. The salt treatment (150 mM NaCl) led to significant decreases in plant growth, fruit yield, relative water content (RWC), stomatal density, uptake of Ca2+, K+ and N, and chlorophyll a and b contents, accompanied by significant increases in Na+ uptake, proline concentration and membrane permeability. Supplementary KNO3 and proline treatments significantly ameliorated the adverse effects of salinity on plant growth, fruit yield and the physiological parameters examined. This could be attributed to the effects of all the external supplements in maintaining membrane permeability, and increasing concentrations of Ca2+, N and K+ in the leaves of plants subjected to salt stress.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of stimulation of amino acid transport system A caused by amino acid deprivation in L6 cells was investigated. In cells loaded with alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), amino acid deprivation increased the rate of proline uptake only after the intracellular [AIB] dropped below 7 mM. Efflux of proline was not sensitive to the presence of proline in the outer medium (with or without external Na+), suggesting that efflux through system A (and possibly uptake) is not susceptible to transinhibition. Transport (stimulated uptake) into amino acid-deprived cells and that into amino acid-supplemented cells differed in several chemical properties: 1) In the former group, transport was higher at lower pH values than in the latter, and the optimum pH values were 7.5 and 7.8, respectively. 2) Unlike proline uptake in supplemented cells, uptake in deprived cells was inhibited by 50% with N-ethylmaleimide (1 mM) or by 50 microM p-chloromercuribenzoate (PCMBS). Inhibition by PCMBS was not due to collapse of the Na+ gradient. The mercurial inhibited only the deprivation-induced stimulation of transport, bringing the rate of proline uptake to the "basal" uptake level observed in amino acid-supplemented cells. Proline uptake was not stimulated by a second deprivation following treatment with PCMBS and a supplementation-deprivation cycle. However, in untreated cells, or by reversing mercaptide formation with dithiotreitol, the second deprivation stimulated transport. Deprivation at 4 degrees C did not elicit stimulation of proline uptake. Cycloheximide prevented the stimulation and decreased the rate of proline uptake in deprived cells more efficiently than in supplemented cells. Actinomycin D prevented stimulation when added at the onset of deprivation. The above data indicate that stimulation of transport by deprivation is protein synthesis-dependent and that the stimulated transport had chemical properties distinct from the "basal" transport in supplemented cells. The evidence presented is consistent with a model of activation of a finite pool of transporters upon deprivation, the chemical characteristics of which differ from those of the "basal" transport system.  相似文献   

17.
Bacillus subtilis synthesizes large amounts of the compatible solute proline as a cellular defense against high osmolarity to ensure a physiologically appropriate level of hydration of the cytoplasm and turgor. It also imports proline for this purpose via the osmotically inducible OpuE transport system. Unexpectedly, an opuE mutant was at a strong growth disadvantage in high-salinity minimal media lacking proline. Appreciable amounts of proline were detected in the culture supernatant of the opuE mutant strain, and they rose concomitantly with increases in the external salinity. We found that the intracellular proline pool of severely salinity-stressed cells of the opuE mutant was considerably lower than that of its opuE(+) parent strain. This loss of proline into the medium and the resulting decrease in the intracellular proline content provide a rational explanation for the observed salt-sensitive growth phenotype of cells lacking OpuE. None of the known MscL- and MscS-type mechanosensitive channels of B. subtilis participated in the release of proline under permanently imposed high-salinity growth conditions. The data reported here show that the OpuE transporter not only possesses the previously reported role for the scavenging of exogenously provided proline as an osmoprotectant but also functions as a physiologically highly important recapturing device for proline that is synthesized de novo and subsequently released by salt-stressed B. subtilis cells. The wider implications of our findings for the retention of compatible solutes by osmotically challenged microorganisms and the roles of uptake systems for compatible solutes are considered.  相似文献   

18.
Nutrient uptake and allocation at steady-state nutrition   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Ingestad, T. and Ågren, G. I. 1988. Nutrient uptake and allocation at steady-state nutrition. - Physiol. Plant. 72: 450–459. Net nutrient uptake and translocation rates are discussed for conditions of steady-state nutrition and growth. Under these conditions, the relative uptake rate is equal to the relative growth rate, for whole plants as well as for plant parts, since the root/shoot ratio and internal concentrations remain stable. The nutrient productivity and the minimum internal concentration are parameters characteristic for the plant and the nutrient. A conceptual, mathematical model, based on these two fundamental parameters is used for calculation and prediction of the net nutrient uptake rate, which is required to maintain steady-state nutrition at a specified internal nutrient concentration or relative growth rate. When uptake rate is expressed on the basis of the root growth rate, there is, up to optimum, a strong linear relationship between uptake rate and the internal concentration of the limiting nutrient. More complicated and less consistent relationships are obtained when uptake rate is related to root biomass. The limiting factor for suboptimum uptake is the amount of nutrients becoming available at the root surface. When replenishment is efficient, e.g. with vigorous stirring, the concentration requirement at the root surface appears to be extremely low, even at optimum. In the suboptimum range of nutrition, the effect of nutrient status on root growth rate is a critical factor with a strong feed-back on nutrition, growth and allocation. At supraoptimum conditions, the uptake mechanism is interpreted as a protection against too high uptake rates and internal concentrations at high external concentration. In birch (Betula pendula Roth.), the allocation of nitrogen to the shoots is high compared to that of potassium and also to that of phosphorus at low nitrogen or phosphorus status. With decreasing stress, phosphorus allocation becomes more and more similar to nitrogen allocation. The formulation of a mathematical model for calculation of allocation of biomass and nutrients requires more exact information on the quantitative dependence of the growth-regulating processes on nutrition.  相似文献   

19.
The three proline transporters of Arabidopsis thaliana (AtProTs) transport the compatible solutes proline and glycine betaine and the stress-induced compound γ-aminobutyric acid when expressed in heterologous systems. The aim of the present study was to show transport and physiological relevance of these three AtProTs in planta. Using single, double, and triple knockout mutants and AtProT-overexpressing lines, proline content, growth on proline, transport of radiolabelled betaine, and expression of AtProT genes and enzymes of proline metabolism were analysed. AtProT2 was shown to facilitate uptake of L- and D-proline as well as [(14)C]glycine betaine in planta, indicating a role in the import of compatible solutes into the root. Toxic concentrations of L- and D-proline resulted in a drastic growth retardation of AtProT-overexpressing plants, demonstrating the need for a precise regulation of proline uptake and/or distribution. Furthermore evidence is provided that AtProT genes are highly expressed in tissues with elevated proline content--that is, pollen and leaf epidermis.  相似文献   

20.
A search was undertaken for osmoprotective compounds for mouse hybridoma cell line 6H11 grown in culture. When the osmolality of the growth medium was increased above the normal osmolality of 330 mOsmol/kg, growth rates were decreased in a dose-dependent fashion, reaching zero when the osmolality of the medium reached approx. 435 mOsmol/kg through the addition of KCl (60 mM), or 510 mOsmol/kg through the addition of NaCl (100 mM), or sucrose (175 mM). For NaCl or sucrose-stressed cultures, the inclusion of glycine betaine, sarcosine, proline, glycine, or asparagine in the growth medium gave a moderate to strong osmoprotective effect, measured as the ability of these compounds to enhance cell growth rates under hyperosmotic conditions. Inclusion of dimethylglycine may also give a strong osmoprotective effect under these stress conditions.In KCl-stressed cell cultures, addition of glycine betaine, sarcosine, or dimethylglycine gave strong osmoprotective effects. Of 38 compounds tested during NaCl stress, 7 gave weak osmoprotective effects and 25 gave no osmoprotective effect. The osmoprotective compounds accumulated inside the stressed cells. Accumulation was completed after 4 to 8 h, reaching intracellular concentrations of approx. 0.27 pmol/cell, or 0.15 M, in NaCl stressed cells (100 mM NaCl added).Glycine betaine, dimethylglycine, and sarcosine accumulation was observed only when these protectants were included in the medium. For all osmoprotectants, a growth medium concentration between 5 and 30 mM gave the maximal protective effect, with the exception of dimethylglycine, for which the optimum concentration was approx. 65 mM. Osmoprotective effects obtained with glycine, sarcosine, dimethylglycine, and glycine betaine, indicate that the more methylated compounds are the most effective protectants.The cellular content of glycine betaine and the glycine betaine uptake rate increased with medium osmolality in a linear fashion. Glycine betaine uptake was described by a model comprising a saturable component obeying Michaelis-Menten kinetics and a nonsaturable component. K(m) and V(max) for glycine betaine uptake were determined at 420 mOsmol/kg (50 mM NaCl added) and 510 mOsmol/kg (100 mM NaCl added). A K(m) value of approx. 2.5 mM was obtained at both medium osmolalities, while V(max) increased from 0.010 pmol/cell . h to 0.018 pmol/cell . h as the osmolality of the growth medium was increased, indicating an effect of medium osmolality on the maximal rate of transport rather than on the affinity of the transporters for glycine betaine. Hybridoma cells were not able to utilize the glycine betaine precursors choline or glycine betaine aldehyde for osmoprotection, suggesting that the cells lack part, or all, of the choline-glycine betaine pathway or the appropriate uptake mechanism.The uptake rate for glycine in NaCl-stressed hybridoma cells was approx. four times higher than the uptake rate for glycine betaine. Furthermore, if equimolar amounts of glycine betaine, glycine, sarcosine, and proline were simultaneously added to NaCl-stressed cell cultures, the intracellular concentrations of glycine, proline, and sarcosine were significantly higher than the concentration of glycine betaine.A 40% increase in hybridoma cell volume was observed when the growth medium osmolality was increased from 300 to 520 mOsmol/kg. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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