Abstract

The mechanisms by which adult male Schistosoma mansoni transport amino acids have been investigated using radioactive amino acids during 2-min incubation times. The transport constants ( K t ) for mediated uptake of glycine, proline, methionine, arginine, glutamate, and tryptophan were calculated to be 0.60-1.05, 1.67-1.98, 2.0, 0.10-0.35, 0.30-0.50, and 0.5-1.0 m M, respectively. Maximal velocities ( V max) were 5.5–7.5, 25, 6.4, 1.5-2.0, 2.5, and 3.0–6.0 μmoles absorbed/g worm protein/2 min, respectively. Cysteine is taken up solely by diffusion. Proline uptake is unique in that no significant diffusion component was found. The other amino acids studied were absorbed by diffusion as well as by specific transport systems. In the 2-min incubation periods employed glycine, proline, glutamate, and methionine were not significantly metabolized indicating that the uptake studies using these substrates reflect transport. Metabolism of the other amino acids used in these studies was not examined. The specificity of the transport systems was studied by testing the inhibitory effects of various amino acids on the uptake of each of the amino acids studied. The results suggest the presence of at least five transport systems. There is a highly specific transport locus for proline, and one for acidic amino acids. There are probably at least two transport systems, each of broad and overlapping specificity, for most of the neutral amino acids. Basic amino acids also appear to be taken up by complex transport systems, at least one of which overlaps with the neutral sites. The results are discussed with respect to the nutrition of the parasite and the host-parasite relationship.

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