Neurospora crassa conidial germination: role of endogenous amino acid pools.

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RESUMO

The levels of the endogenous amino acid pools in conidia, germinating conidia, and mycelia of wild-type Neurospora crassa were measured. Three different chromatographic procedures employing the amino acid analyzer were used to identify and quantitatively measure 28 different ninhydrin-positive compounds. All of the common amino acids were detected in conidial extracts except proline, methionine, and cystine. The levels of these three amino acid pools were also very low in mycelia. During the first hour of germination in minimal medium, the levels of most of the free amino acid pools decreased. The pool of glutamic acid, the predominant free amino acid in conidia, decreased 70% during the first hour. Very little glutamic acid or any other amino acid was excreted into the medium. During the first 20 min of germination, the decrease in the glutamic acid pool was nearly equivalent to the increase in the aspartic acid pool. The aspartic acid and lambda-aminobutyric acid pools were the only amino acid pools that increased to maximum levels within the first 20 min of germination and then decreased. It is proposed that an important metabolic event that occurs during the early stages of conidial germination is the production of reduced pyridine nucleotides. The degradation of the large glutamic acid pool existing in the conidia (2.5% of the conidial dry weight) could produce these reduced coenzymes.

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