Utilization of nucleoside monophosphates per Se for intraperiplasmic growth of Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus.

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During growth of Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus on Escherichia coli, there was a marked preferential use of E. coli phosphorus over exogenous orthophosphate even though the latter permeated into the intraperiplasmic space where the bdellovibrio was growing. This preferential use occurred to an equal extent for lipid phosphorus and nucleic acid phosphorus. Exogenous thymidine-5'-monophosphate competed effectively with [3H]thymine residues of E. coli as a precursor for bdellovibrio deoxyribonucleic acid; exogenous thymidine competed less effectively and thymine and uridine not at all. A mixture of exogenous nucleoside-5'-monophosphates equilibrated effectively with E. coli phosphorus as a phosphorus source for B. bacteriovorus; the nucleotide phosphorus entered preferentially into bdellovibrio nucleic acids. A comparable mixture of exogenous nucleosides plus orthophosphate had only a small effect on utilization of E. coli phosphorus by B. bacteriovorus, as did orthophosphate alone. A mixture of exogenous deoxyriboside monophosphates equilibrium effectively with E. coli phosphorus as a phosphorus source for bdellovibrio growth; the phosphorus from this source entered preferentially into deoxyribonucleic acid. These data show that nucleoside monophosphates derived from the substrate organism are utilized directly for n-cleic acid biosynthesis by B. bacteriovorus growing intraperiplasmically. As a consequence, the phosphate ester bonds preexisting in the nucleic acids of the substrate organism are conserved by the bdellovibrio, presumably lessening its energy requirement for intraperiplasmic growth. The data also suggest, but do not prove, that the phosphate ester bonds of phospholipids are also conserved.

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