Abstract

The intracellular acid-soluble purine and pyrimidine derivatives of myxamoebae-swarm cells of Physarum flavicomum were investigated during growth, microcyst formation, and during adenine-inhibition of encystment, using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). We also studied the incorporation of exogenous radioactive adenine into the acid soluble purine derivatives and S-adenosyl-sulphur compounds separated by HPLC. The most abundant ribonucleoside monophosphate was AMP in the growing and 15 h encysting cells (NC), while it was UMP in the 15 h adenine-inhibited cells (AIC). ADP was the nucleoside diphosphate present in the greatest quantity in the growing and NC cells but it was CDP in the AIC. The nucleoside triphosphate in highest concentration was ATP, UTP, and GTP in growing, NC, and AIC, respectively. Guanosine was the most abundant nucleoside in all cells. The nucleobase occurring in greatest concentration was cytosine, cytosine and guanine, and adenine in the growing, NC, and AIC, respectively. The AMP content in the 15 h AIC was 2.1-fold higher than that of adenosine. The 15 h NC had the lowest adenylate energy charge, a value of 0.54 +/- 0.02, while the values for growing cells and the AIC were 0.62 +/- 0.02 and 0.76 +/- 0.01, respectively. [14C]-Adenine labelling studies (15 h) revealed the occurrence of purine nucleotide interconversion, as the label was detected not only in adenosine, AMP, ADP, ATP, but also in guanine, guanosine, GMP, GDP, GTP, as well as, in inosine monophosphate and xanthosine monophosphate. The percentage incorporation of the radiolabelled adenine into AMP was higher than into adenosine. An increased intracellular level of guanine nucleotides is associated with the inhibition of encystment. The extracellular adenine, rather than internal adenine sources, appears to be the primary precursor of nucleotide for S-adenosylmethionine synthesis during adenine-inhibition of encystment.

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