Regulation of purine metabolism in intact leaves of Coffea arabica

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Abstract

The capacity of Coffea arabica leaves (5- × 5-mm pieces) to synthesize de novo and catabolize purine nucleotides to provide precursors for caffeine (1,3,7-trimethylxanthine) was investigated. Consistent with de novo synthesis, glycine, bicarbonate, and formate were incorporated into the purine ring of inosine 5′-monophosphate (IMP) and adenine nucleotides (ΣAde); azaserine, a known inhibitor of purine de novo synthesis, inhibited incorporation. Activity of the de novo pathway in C. arabica per g fresh weight of leaf tissue during a 3-h incubation period was 8 ± 4 nmol of formate incorporated into IMP, 61 ± 7 nmol into ΣAde, and 150 nmol into caffeine (the latter during a 7-h incubation). Coffee leaves exhibited classical purine catabolism. Radiolabeled formate, inosine, adenosine, and adenine were incorporated into hypoxanthine and xanthine, which were catabolized to allantoin and urea. Urease activity was demonstrated. Per g fresh weight, coffee leaf squares incorporated 90 ± 22 nmol of xanthine into caffeine in 7 h but degraded 102 ± 1 nmol of xanthine to allantoin in 3 h. Feedback control of de novo purine biosynthesis was contrasted in C. arabica and Cucurbita pepo, a species that does not synthesize purine alkaloids. End-product inhibition was demonstrated to occur in both species but at different enzyme reactions.

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Nazario, G. M., & Lovatt, C. J. (1993). Regulation of purine metabolism in intact leaves of Coffea arabica. Plant Physiology, 103(4), 1195–1201. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.103.4.1195

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