Abstract
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell transfectants expressing various levels of human and Escherichia coli folylpoly-gamma-glutamate synthetase (FPGS) activity and possessing different folylpolyglutamate chain length distributions have been developed as models for folate and antifolate metabolism. The synthesis of pteroyltriglutamate was sufficient for normal cellular retention of folate and also overcame the phenotypic requirement for purines and thymidine of AUXB1, a CHO cell mutant lacking FPGS activity and lacking folylpolyglutamates. Only low levels of FPGS are required to enable cellular metabolism of folates to forms that are retained by mammalian cells. The higher levels found in mammalian cells are required for the synthesis of the long chain polyglutamate derivatives characteristic of mammalian cells. At low medium folate concentrations, folate accumulation by transfectants expressing human FPGS was not responsive to FPGS levels as the limiting step in metabolism was beyond the triglutamate, the chain length required for retention. The rate-limiting step in folate metabolism in cells expressing the E. coli enzyme was the conversion of diglutamate to triglutamate, and, at low FPGS levels, the E. coli enzyme was about 50-fold less effective than the human FPGS in enabling cellular folate accumulation. These data suggest that cellular accumulation of any folate analog whose mono- or diglutamate derivative is a poor substrate for FPGS would be very responsive to the level of FPGS activity.
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