Abstract
An analysis of metabolism by measurement of respiratory quotient values indicates that reduced substances, such as lipids and/or amino acids, are the primary respiratory substrates of dormant Dictyostelium discoideum spores. The spores appear to consume both reduced substances and carbohydrates during the swelling stage of germination. The respiration of emerged myxamoebae is again dominated by the consumption of reduced substances. The pool of trehalose remains largely intact during heat-induced activation and also during postactivation lag. The initiation of spore swelling is accompanied by a decrease in the trehalose pool; the majority of trehalose is consumed before late spore swelling. Upon placing heat-activated spores under restrictive environmental conditions, swelling and trehalose hydrolysis are both prevented. Release from these conditions results in rapid swelling and hydrolysis of trehalose. Trehalase, the enzyme responsible for trehalose breakdown, is present in dormant spores at basal levels. This preformed enzyme is responsible for the hydrolysis of trehalose even though there is a significant increase in trehalase activity with the emergence of myxamoebae. RNA and protein synthesis inhibitors do not prevent trehalose hydrolysis or spore swelling. It is concluded that oxidation of reduced substances occurs in dormant, activated, and swollen spores, as well as in emerged myxamoebae of D. discoideum. Carbohydrate utilization dominates over the oxidation of reduced substances only during the swelling stage of germination.
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