## Abstract Techniques are described by which the transport of nutrients into mammalian cells in suspension can be measured at intervals of 1.5 seconds. By application of these techniques, the existence of a saturable (K~m~ = 85 μM), non‐concentrative, transport system for thymidine was demonstrate
Facilitated transport of uracil and 5-fluorouracil, and permeation of orotic acid into cultured mammalian cells
✍ Scribed by Robert M. Wohlhueter; R. Scott McIvor; Peter G. W. Plagemann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 909 KB
- Volume
- 104
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The mode of permeation of uracil, 5–fluorouracil, and orotic acid into cells has been investigated in four established cell lines (Novikoff rat hepatoma, P388 mouse leukemia, mouse L, and Chinese hamster ovary cells) in attempts to assess the rate‐determining step(s) in their incorporation into the nucleotide pool and nucleic acids. Uracil and 5–fluorouracil shared a saturable transport system (K~m~ = 5 to 15 mM) capable of rapid equilibration of these substrates across the cell membrane (t~1/2~ at 25 in first‐order range of concentration = 25 to 58 sec). Thus it seems unlikely that transport is limiting the incorporation hypoxanthine. Only the non‐ionized form of fluorouracil was a substrate for the transporter; exclusion of charged pyrimidines may explain why orotate was not a substrate at physiological pH. Orotate permeated the cell membrane much more slowly (t~1/2~ = 2890 to 6930 sec); its permeation was apparently non‐mediated and rate‐determining in the conversion of extracellular orotate to intracellular nucleotides.
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