Abstract: | SYNOPSIS. Low concentrations of chlorpromazine (~0.01 mM) inhibit growth and nucleic acid synthesis in the ciliate Tetrahymena pyriformis. Brief exposure of the cells to, e.g. 0.018 mM chlorpromazine, had very little effect on 14CO2 production or on label incorporation into glycogen from [1-14C]glucetate, [6–14C]glucose, or [1-14C]leucine, but 17-h exposure of stationary phase cultures to this drug caused marked alterations in metabolism, including an almost complete loss of ability to decarboxylate L-[1-14C]leucine and L-[1-14C]tyrosine. It was shown that loss of ability to decarboxylate these amino acids results from loss of ability to transport them. |