Hypoxanthine transport in the insect trypanosome, Crithidia
luciliae, was activated in purine depleted conditions. The existence
of 2 hypoxanthine transport mechanisms was established. The first, a non-saturable
diffusion system, present in purine replete conditions, exhibited properties
that were different from the second transport system which was evident
only during purine depleted conditions (purine stress). The rate of transport
under purine stress was elevated approximately 8-fold over that in replete
conditions. This transporter was saturable with a Km
of 3·9 μM for hypoxanthine. The transporter substrate specificity
included other purine bases, e.g. adenine and guanine, and the purine nucleoside,
adenosine. These inhibited hypoxanthine transport competitively with Ki
values of 2 μM, 3 μM and 42 μM respectively.
Coincident with the increase of hypoxanthine transport under purine stress,
the transport of adenosine increased 4-fold and the activity of the 3′-nucleotidase
ectoenzyme also increased significantly. Under purine stress the concurrent
increase of hypoxanthine and adenosine transport and the increase in 3′-nucleotidase
activity could be repressed with either the supplementation of excess purines
or by cycloheximide. This study of purine salvage mechanisms in Crithidia
luciliae illustrates the successful adaptation of the parasite to
nutritional insufficiency.