Plant Physiol.
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Plant Physiology 69:1401-1403 (1982)
© 1982 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Uptake and Degradation of Cyclic AMP by Chloronema Cells

Shobhona Sharma and Man Mohan Johri

Molecular Biology Unit, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bombay 400 005, India

Suspension cultures of intact chloronema cells of the moss Funaria hygrometrica take up [3H]cAMP and degrade it rapidly. The increase in total radioactivity accumulated by the cells was linear up to 30 minutes. Initially, the major degradation products were 5'-AMP and adenosine, but later predominantly ADP and ATP. In spite of rapid degradation, the amount of extracellularly applied cAMP retained by the cells is about 4-fold higher than the maximum endogenous level of cAMP reported previously (Handa, Johri 1977 Plant Physiol 59: 490-496). The uptake showed a distinct dependence on the density of the culture. Cells at a lower cell density (1-2 milligrams per milliliter) accumulated 4 to 6 times more radioactivity than the cells at high density (>10 milligrams per milliliter). The cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (cNPDE) activity of whole cells (18 milliunits per milligram protein) was comparable to that of protoplasts (23 milliunits per milligram protein), but about 4-fold lower than that of lysed protoplasts (80 milliunits per milligram protein), indicating an intracellular degradation of cAMP by chloronema cells.








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Copyright © 1982 by the American Society of Plant Biologists