Abstract: | Paramecium tetraurelia is attracted to cyclic AMP, which probably, as other attractants, signifies the presence of food. Attraction to cyclic AMP was specific, saturable, and, therefore, likely to be receptor-mediated. In these studies, we measured the binding of cyclic [3H]AMP to whole cells and found it to be saturable, reversible, and displaying specificity similar to that of attraction. An HPLC method of separating nucleotides was devised and used to determine that external cyclic AMP was degraded in the absence of IBMX, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, and that cyclic AMP was taken into the cells in small amounts. Since binding and attraction were subsequently measured in the presence of IMBX, it was cyclic AMP and not a degradation product that served as the attractant stimulus for Paramecium. |