Abstract
A guanine-requiring mutant of Brevibacterium ammoniagenes ATCC 6872 accumulated a large amonnt of 5'-xanthosine-monophosphate (abbreviated as XMP).
The quantity of XMP accumulated by the strain was affected significantly by guanine levels in the medium. The suppression of XMP accumulation by an excessive addition of guanine compounds was recovered by the supply of casamino acids in the medium.
An enzyme in the pathway of de novo XMP synthesis, IMP dehydrogenase (IMP: NAD oxidoreductase, EC 1.2.1.14), was repressed and inhibited by guanine compounds.
The facts that an exogenous xanthine was not converted to XMP by the growing cells and that the activity of XMP-pyrophosphorylase was very low or deficient suggest that XMP accumulation by the strain would be probably due to the direct excretion of the nucleotide from the cells.