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1.
A. J. Barczak  J. Zhao  K. D. Pruitt    R. L. Last 《Genetics》1995,140(1):303-313
A study of the biochemical genetics of the Arabidopsis thaliana tryptophan synthase beta subunit was initiated by characterization of mutants resistant to the inhibitor 5-fluoroindole. Thirteen recessive mutations were recovered that are allelic to trp2-1, a mutation in the more highly expressed of duplicate tryptophan synthase beta subunit genes (TSB1). Ten of these mutations (trp2-2 through trp2-11) cause a tryptophan requirement (auxotrophs), whereas three (trp2-100 through trp2-102) remain tryptophan prototrophs. The mutations cause a variety of changes in tryptophan synthase beta expression. For example, two mutations (trp2-5 and trp2-8) cause dramatically reduced accumulation of TSB mRNA and immunologically detectable protein, whereas trp2-10 is associated with increased mRNA and protein. A correlation exists between the quantity of mutant beta and wild-type alpha subunit levels in the trp2 mutant plants, suggesting that the synthesis of these proteins is coordinated or that the quantity or structure of the beta subunit influences the stability of the alpha protein. The level of immunologically detectable anthranilate synthase alpha subunit protein is increased in the trp2 mutants, suggesting the possibility of regulation of anthranilate synthase levels in response to tryptophan limitation.  相似文献   

2.
In plants, the indole pathway provides precursors for a variety of secondary metabolites. In Catharanthus roseus, a decarboxylated derivative of tryptophan, tryptamine, is a building block for the biosynthesis of terpenoid indole alkaloids. Previously, we manipulated the indole pathway by introducing an Arabidopsis feedback-insensitive anthranilate synthase (AS) alpha subunit (trp5) cDNA and C. roseus tryptophan decarboxylase gene (TDC) under the control of a glucocorticoid-inducible promoter into C. roseus hairy roots [Hughes, E.H., Hong, S.-B., Gibson, S.I., Shanks, J.V., San, K.-Y. 2004a. Expression of a feedback-resistant anthranilate synthase in Catharanthus roseus hairy roots provides evidence for tight regulation of terpenoid indole alkaloid levels. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 86, 718-727; Hughes, E.H., Hong, S.-B., Gibson, S.I., Shanks, J.V., San, K.-Y. 2004b. Metabolic engineering of the indole pathway in Catharanthus roseus hairy roots and increased accumulation of tryptamine and serpentine. Metabol. Eng. 6, 268-276]. Inducible expression of either or both transgenes did not lead to significant increases in overall alkaloid levels despite the considerable accumulation of tryptophan and tryptamine. In an attempt to more successfully engineer the indole pathway, a wild type Arabidopsis ASbeta subunit (ASB1) cDNA was constitutively expressed along with the inducible expression of trp5 and TDC in C. roseus hairy roots. Transgenic hairy roots expressing both trp5 and ASB1 show a significantly greater resistance to feedback inhibition of AS activity by tryptophan than plants expressing only trp5. In fact, a 4.5-fold higher concentration of tryptophan is required to achieve 50% inhibition of AS activity in plants overexpressing both genes than in plants expressing only trp5. In addition, upon a 3 day induction during the exponential phase, a trp5:ASB1 hairy root line produced 1.8 times more tryptophan (specific yield ca. 3.0 mg g(-1) dry weight) than the trp5 hairy root line. Concurrently, tryptamine levels increase up to 9-fold in the induced trp5:ASB1 line (specific yield ca. 1.9 mg g(-1) dry weight) as compared with only a 4-fold tryptamine increase in the induced trp5 line (specific yield ca. 0.3 mg g(-1) dry weight). However, endogenous TDC activities of both trp5:ASB1 and trp5 lines remain unchanged irrespective of induction. When TDC is ectopically expressed together with trp5 and ASB1, the induced trp5:ASB1:TDC hairy root line accumulates tryptamine up to 14-fold higher than the uninduced line. In parallel with the remarkable accumulation of tryptamine upon induction, alkaloid accumulation levels were significantly changed depending on the duration and dosage of induction.  相似文献   

3.
Three mutations in the Arabidopsis thaliana gene encoding the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase were isolated by selection for resistance to 5-methylanthranilate or 5-fluoroindole, toxic analogs of tryptophan pathway intermediates. Plants homozygous for trp3-1 and trp3-2 are light-conditional tryptophan auxotrophs, while trp3-100 is a more leaky mutant. Genetic complementation crosses demonstrated that the three mutations are allelic to each other, and define a new complementation group. All three mutants have decreased steady-state levels of tryptophan synthase alpha protein, and the trp3-100 polypeptide exhibits altered electrophoretic mobility. All three mutations were shown to be in the TSA1 (tryptophan synthase alpha subunit) structural gene by several criteria. Firstly, the trp3-1 mutation is linked to TSA1 on the bottom of chromosome 3. Secondly, the trp3-1 mutation was complemented when transformed with the wild-type TSA1 gene. Finally, DNA sequence analysis of the TSA1 gene revealed a single transition mutation in each trp3 mutant.  相似文献   

4.
 Three mutations in the Arabidopsis thaliana gene encoding the alpha subunit of tryptophan synthase were isolated by selection for resistance to 5-methylanthranilate or 5-fluoroindole, toxic analogs of tryptophan pathway intermediates. Plants homozygous for trp3-1 and trp3-2 are light-conditional tryptophan auxotrophs, while trp3-100 is a more leaky mutant. Genetic complementation crosses demonstrated that the three mutations are allelic to each other, and define a new complementation group. All three mutants have decreased steady-state levels of tryptophan synthase alpha protein, and the trp3-100 polypeptide exhibits altered electrophoretic mobility. All three mutations were shown to be in the TSA1 (tryptophan synthase alpha subunit) structural gene by several criteria. Firstly, the trp3-1 mutation is linked to TSA1 on the bottom of chromosome 3. Secondly, the trp3-1 mutation was complemented when transformed with the wild-type TSA1 gene. Finally, DNA sequence analysis of the TSA1 gene revealed a single transition mutation in each trp3 mutant. Received: 28 May 1996 / Accepted: 19 June 1996  相似文献   

5.
J A Kreps  T Ponappa  W Dong    C D Town 《Plant physiology》1996,110(4):1159-1165
A mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, amt-1, was previously selected for resistance to growth inhibition by the tryptophan analog alpha-methyltryptophan. This mutant had elevated tryptophan levels and exhibited higher anthranilate synthase (AS) activity that showed increased resistance to feedback inhibition by tryptophan. In this study, extracts of the mutant callus exhibited higher AS activity than wild-type callus when assayed with either glutamine or ammonium sulfate as amino donor, thus suggesting that elevated AS activity in the mutant was due to an alteration in the alpha subunit of the enzyme. The mutant also showed cross-resistance to 5-methylanthranilate and 6-methylanthranilate and mapped to chromosome V at or close to ASA1 (a gene encoding the AS alpha subunit). ASA1 mRNA and protein levels were similar in mutant and wild-type leaf extracts. Levels of ASA1 mRNA and protein were also similar in callus cultures of mutant and wild type, although the levels in callus were higher than in leaf tissue. Sequencing of the ASA1 gene from amt-1 revealed a G to A transition relative to the wild-type gene that would result in the substitution of an asparagine residue in place of aspartic acid at position 341 in the predicted amino acid sequence of the ASA1 protein. The mutant allele in strain amt-1 has been renamed trp5-1.  相似文献   

6.
The cruciferous plant Arabidopsis thaliana has two closely related, nonallelic tryptophan synthase beta genes (TSB1 and TSB2), each containing four introns and a chloroplast leader sequence. Both genes are transcribed, although TSB1 produces greater than 90% of tryptophan synthase beta mRNA in leaf tissue. A tryptophan-requiring mutant, trp2-1, has been identified that has about 10% of the wild-type tryptophan synthase beta activity. The trp2-1 mutation is complemented by the TSB1 transgene and is linked genetically to a polymorphism in the TSB1 gene, strongly suggesting that trp2-1 is a mutation in TSB1. The trp2-1 mutants are conditional: they require tryptophan for growth under standard illumination but not under very low light conditions. Presumably, under low light the poorly expressed gene, TSB2, is capable of supporting growth. Genetic redundancy may be common to many aromatic amino acid biosynthetic enzymes in plants because mutants defective in two other genes (TRP1 and TRP3) also exhibit a conditional tryptophan auxotrophy. The existence of two tryptophan pathways has important consequences for tissue-specific regulation of amino acid and secondary metabolite biosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Plant mutants with defects in intermediate enzymes of the tryptophan biosynthetic pathway often display a blue fluorescent phenotype. This phenotype results from the accumulation of the fluorescent tryptophan precursor anthranilate, the bulk of which is found in a glucose-conjugated form. To elucidate factors that control fluorescent tryptophan metabolites, we conducted a genetic screen for suppressors of blue fluorescence in the Arabidopsis trp1-100 mutant, which has a defect in the second enzymatic step of the tryptophan pathway. This screen yielded loss-of-function mutations in the UDP-glucosyltransferase gene UGT74F2. The bacterially expressed UGT74F2 enzyme catalyzed a conjugation reaction, with free anthranilate and UDP-glucose as substrates, that yielded the same fluorescent glucose ester compound as extracted from the trp1-100 mutant. These results indicate that sugar conjugation of anthranilate by UGT74F2 allows its stable accumulation in plant tissues. A highly related Arabidopsis enzyme UGT74F1 could also catalyze this reaction in vitro and could complement the ugt74F2 mutation when overexpressed in vivo. However, the UGT74F1 gene is expressed at a lower level than the UGT74F2 gene. Therefore, even though UGT74F1 and UGT74F2 have redundant conjugating activities toward anthranilate, UGT74F2 is the major source of this activity in the plant.  相似文献   

8.
J Li  R L Last 《Plant physiology》1996,110(1):51-59
The first step of tryptophan biosynthesis is catalyzed by anthranilate synthase (AS), which is normally subject to feedback inhibition by tryptophan. Three independent trp5 mutants defective in the Arabidopsis thaliana AS alpha subunit structural gene ASA1 were identified by selection for resistance to the herbicidal compound 6-methylanthranilate. In all three mutants these biochemical changes are caused by a single amino acid substitution from aspartate to asparagine at residue position 341. Compared with the enzyme from wild-type plants, the tryptophan concentration causing 50% inhibition of AS activity in the trp5 mutant increased nearly 3-fold, the apparent Km for chorismate decreased by approximately 50%, and the apparent Vmax increased 60%. As a consequence of altered AS kinetic properties, the trp5 mutants accumulated 3-fold higher soluble tryptophan than wild-type plants. However, even though the soluble tryptophan levels were increased in trp5 plants, the concentrations of five tryptophan biosynthetic proteins remained unchanged. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the reaction catalyzed by A. thaliana AS is rate limiting for the tryptophan pathway and that accumulation of tryptophan biosynthetic enzymes is not repressed by a 3-fold excess of end product.  相似文献   

9.
Arabidopsis thaliana has two genes, ASA1 and ASA2, encoding the alpha subunit of anthranilate synthase, the enzyme catalyzing the first reaction in the tryptophan biosynthetic pathway. As a branchpoint enzyme in aromatic amino acid biosynthesis, anthranilate synthase has an important regulatory role. The sequences of the plant genes are homologous to their microbial counterparts. Both predicted proteins have putative chloroplast transit peptides at their amino termini and conserved amino acids involved in feedback inhibition by tryptophan. ASA1 and ASA2 cDNAs complement anthranilate synthase alpha subunit mutations in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and in Escherichia coli, confirming that both genes encode functional anthranilate synthase proteins. The distributions of ASA1 and ASA2 mRNAs in various parts of Arabidopsis plants are overlapping but nonidentical, and ASA1 mRNA is approximately 10 times more abundant in whole plants. Whereas ASA2 is expressed at a constitutive basal level, ASA1 is induced by wounding and bacterial pathogen infiltration, suggesting a novel role for ASA1 in the production of tryptophan pathway metabolites as part of an Arabidopsis defense response. Regulation of key steps in aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in Arabidopsis appears to involve differential expression of duplicated genes.  相似文献   

10.
orange pericarp (orp) is a seedling lethal mutant of maize caused by mutations in the duplicate unlinked recessive loci orp1 and orp2. Mutant seedlings accumulate two tryptophan precursors, anthranilate and indole, suggesting a block in tryptophan biosynthesis. Results from feeding studies and enzyme assays indicate that the orp mutant is defective in tryptophan synthase beta activity. Thus, orp is one of only a few amino acid auxotrophic mutants to be characterized in plants. Two genes encoding tryptophan synthase beta were isolated from maize and sequenced. Both genes encode polypeptides with high homology to tryptophan synthase beta enzymes from other organisms. The cloned genes were mapped by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to approximately the same chromosomal locations as the genetically mapped factors orp1 and orp2. RNA analysis indicates that both genes are expressed in all tissues examined from normal plants. Together, the biochemical, genetic, and molecular data verify the identity of orp1 and orp2 as duplicate structural genes for the beta subunit of tryptophan synthase.  相似文献   

11.
For the purpose of studying the production of L-tryptophan by Escherichia coli, the deletion mutants of the trp operon (trpAE1) were transformed with mutant plasmids carrying the trp operon whose anthranilate synthase and phosphoribosyl anthranilate transferase (anthranilate aggregate), respectively, had been desensitized to tryptophan inhibition. In addition to release of the anthranilate aggregate from the feedback inhibition required for plasmids such as pSC101 trp.I15, the properties of trp repression (trpR) and tryptophanase deficiency (tnaA) were both indispensable for host strains such as strain Tna (trpAE1 trpR tnaA). The gene dosage effects on tryptophan synthase activities and on production of tryptophan were assessed. A moderate plasmid copy number, approximately five per chromosome, was optimal for tryptophan production. Similarly, an appropriate release of the anthranilate aggregate from feedback inhibition was also a necessary step to ward off the metabolic anomaly. If the mutant plasmid pSC101 trp-I15 was further mutagenized (pSC101 trp.I15.14) and then transferred to Tna cells, an effective enhancement of tryptophan production was achieved. Although further improvement of the host-plasmid system is needed before commercial production of tryptophan can be realized by this means, a promising step toward this goal has been established.  相似文献   

12.
The abilities of 14 tryptophan analogs to repress the tryptophan (trp) operon have been studied in Escherichia coli cells derepressed by incubation with 0.25 mM indole-3-propionic acid (IPA). trp operon expression was monitored by measuring the specific activities of anthranilate synthase (EC 4.1.3.27) and the tryptophan synthase (EC 4.2.1.20) beta subunit. Analogs characterized by modification or removal of the alpha-amino group or the alpha-carboxyl group did not repress the trp operon. The only analogs among this group that appeared to interact with the trp aporepressor were IPA, which derepressed the trp operon, and d-tryptophan. Analogs with modifications of the indole ring repressed the trp operon to various degrees. 7-Methyl-tryptophan inhibited anthranilate synthase activity and consequently derepressed the trp operon. Additionally, 7-methyltryptophan prevented IPA-mediated derepression but, unlike tryptophan, did so in a non-coordinate manner, with the later enzymes of the operon being relatively more repressed than the early enzymes. The effect of 7-methyltryptophan on IPA-mediated derepression was likely not due to the interaction of IPA with the allosteric site of anthranilate synthase, even though feedback-resistant mutants of anthranilate synthase were partially resistant to derepression by IPA. The effect of 7-methyltryptophan on derepression by IPA was probably due to the effect of the analog-aporepressor complex on trp operon expression.  相似文献   

13.
The 6-fluorotryptophan resistant MR1 mutant was obtained from Pseudomonas putida M30 (Tyr- Phe-) strain. The mutant was able to excrete tryptophan (60 micrograms/ml) and has derepressed aroF gene encoding 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase. The mutation isolated was identified as aroR with the help of cloning early aroF gene of P. putida. On the next step of selection, regulatory mutant MR2 was obtained producing 240 micrograms/ml of tryptophan. The MR2 has derepressed unlinked trpE and trpDC genes and represents a mutant of the trpR type. Expression of the trpE gene of P. putida MR2 weakened in the presence of tryptophan excess in the medium, which points to attenuation of this gene. From the prototrophic variant of P. putida MR2 the MRP3 mutant producing 850 micrograms/ml of tryptophan was obtained. This mutant was characterized by twofold increase in the activity of the anthranilate synthase encoded by the trpE gene. The assay of the activity of tryptophanyl-tRNA synthase in P. putida MRP3 demonstrated that the mutant has TrpS+ phenotype.  相似文献   

14.
Arabidopsis thaliana roots grow in a wavy pattern upon a slanted surface. A novel mutation in the anthranilate synthase α1 ( ASA1 ) gene, named trp5–2wvc1 , and mutations in the tryptophan synthase α and β1 genes ( trp3–1 and trp2–1 , respectively) confer a compressed root wave phenotype on tilted agar surfaces. When trp5–2wvc1 seedlings are grown on media supplemented with anthranilate metabolites, their roots wave like wild type. Genetic and pharmacological experiments argue that the compressed root wave phenotypes of trp5–2wvc1 , trp2–1 and trp3–1 seedlings are not due to reduced IAA biosynthetic potential, but rather to a deficiency in L-tryptophan (L-Trp), or in a L-Trp derivative. Although the roots of 7-day-old seedlings possess higher concentrations of free L-Trp than the shoot as a whole, trp5–2wvc1 mutants show no detectable alteration in L-Trp levels in either tissue type, suggesting that a very localized shortage of L-Trp, or of a L-Trp-derived compound, is responsible for the observed phenotype.  相似文献   

15.
Forty single gene mutations in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii were isolated based on resistance to the compound 5'-methyl anthranilic acid (5-MAA). In other organisms, 5-MAA is converted to 5'-methyltryptophan (5-MT) and 5-MT is a potent inhibitor of anthranilate synthase, which catalyzes the first committed step in tryptophan biosynthesis. The mutant strains fall into two phenotypic classes based on the rate of cell division in the absence of 5-MAA. Strains with class I mutations divide more slowly than wild-type cells. These 17 mutations map to seven loci, which are designated MAA1 to MAA7. Strains with class II mutations have generation times indistinguishable from wild-type cells, and 7 of these 23 mutations map to loci defined by class I mutations. The remainder of the class II mutations map to 9 other loci, which are designated MAA8-MAA16. The maa5-1 mutant strain excretes high levels of anthranilate and phenylalanine into the medium. In this strain, four enzymatic activities in the tryptophan biosynthetic pathway are increased at least twofold. These include the combined activities of anthranilate phosphoribosyl transferase, phosphoribosyl anthranilate isomerase, indoleglycerol phosphate synthetase and anthranilate synthase. The slow growth phenotypes of strains with class I mutations are not rescued by the addition of tryptophan, but the slow growth phenotype of the maa6-1 mutant strain is partially rescued by the addition of indole. The maa6-1 mutant strain excretes a fluorescent compound into the medium, and cell extracts have no combined anthranilate phosphoribosyl transferase, phosphoribosyl anthranilate isomerase and indoleglycerol phosphate synthetase activity. The MAA6 locus is likely to encode a tryptophan biosynthetic enzyme. None of the other class I mutations affected these enzyme activities. Based on the phenotypes of double mutant strains, epistatic relationships among the class I mutations have been determined.  相似文献   

16.
An indole-requiring (Ind(-)) mutant of Salmonella typhimurium, isolated from a culture of a leaky trpA mutant, was genetically analyzed by P22-mediated transduction. The mutation site giving the Ind(-) phenotype was shown to be in trpB, the second gene of the trp operon. A second mutation at this site resulted in change of nutritional requirement from indole to anthranilic acid (Anth(-)). This phenotype is normally associated with mutations in the first trp gene, trpA. However, the Anth(-) mutant also excreted anthranilic acid and showed "self-feeding" on unsupplemented media. Of two possible explanations for this aberrant phenotype, the first, that the trpB mutations may be in the "unusual" region, was dismissed on genetic evidence and on the biochemical evidence that an active anthranilate synthetase (AS) is produced. The alternative explanation, that the affected enzymatic activity, phosphoribosyl transferase, is unstable in vivo, but its AS component 2 activity is stable, is considered more probable.  相似文献   

17.
Auxotrophs of Acinetobacter calcoaceticus blocked in each reaction of the synthetic pathway from chorismic acid to tryptophan were obtained after N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis. One novel class was found to be blocked in both anthranilate and p-aminobenzoate synthesis; these mutants (trpG) require p-aminobenzoate or folate as well as tryptophan (or anthranilate) for growth. The loci of six other auxotrophic classes requiring only tryptophan were defined by growth, accumulation, and enzymatic analysis where appropriate. The trp mutations map in three chromosomal locations. One group contains trpC and trpD (indoleglycerol phosphate synthetase and phosphoribosyl transferase) in addition to trpG mutations; this group is closely linked to a locus conferring a glutamate requirement. Another cluster contains trpA and trpB, coding for the two tryptophan synthetase (EC 4.2.1.20) subunits, along with trpF (phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase); this group is weakly linked to a his marker. The trpE gene, coding for the large subunit of anthranilate synthetase, is unlinked to any of the above. This chromosomal distribution of the trp genes has not been observed in other organisms.  相似文献   

18.
The amber mutant trpA28, which contains a mutation mapping within the so-called "unusual" region of the tryptophan (trp) operon of Salmonella typhimurium (between the genes trpA and trpB), lacks both components of the anthranilate synthetase (AS)-phosphoribosyl transferase (PRT) enzyme complex, the products of the genes trpA and trpB, respectively. Twenty-six revertants of this mutant selected on minimal medium supplemented with anthranilic acid, a substrate of PRT, contain deletions of various segments of the "unusual" region and make a species of PRT different in every respect from the wild-type, dissociated form of this enzyme. The results indicate that the unusual region corresponds to the operator proximal end of the trpB gene. Mutants in the unusual region, however, show unexpectedly low levels of AS activity and in two cases (trpA515 and trpA28) no detectable activity of this enzyme component.  相似文献   

19.
In an analysis of the effects of various tryptophan and indole analogues in Saccharomyces cerevisiae we determined the mechanisms by which they cause growth inhibition: 4-Methyltryptophan causes a reduction in protein synthesis and a derepression of the tryptophan enzymes despite of the presence of high internal levels of tryptophan. This inhibition can only be observed in a mutant with increased permeability to the analogue. These results are consistent with but do not prove an interference of this analogue with the charging of tryptophan onto tRNA. 5-Methyltryptophan causes false feedback inhibition of anthranilate synthase, the first enzyme of the tryptophan pathway. This inhibits the further synthesis of tryptophan and results in results in tryptophan limitation, growth inhibition and derepression of the enzymes. Derepression eventually allows wild type cells to partially overcome the inhibitory effect of the analogue. 5-Fluoroindole is converted endogenously to 5-fluorotryptophan by tryptophan synthase. Both endogenous and externally supplied 5-fluorotryptophan are incorporated into protein. This leads to intoxication of the cells due to the accumulation of faulty proteins. 5-Fluorotryptophan also causes feedback inhibition of anthranilate synthase and reduces the synthesis of tryptophan which would otherwise compete with the analogues in the charging reaction. Indole acrylic acid inhibits the conversion of indole to tryptophan by tryptophan synthase. This results in a depletion of the tryptophan pool which, in turn, causes growth inhibition and derepression of the tryptophan enzymes.Abbreviations cpm counts per minute - OD optical density at 546 nm - TCA trichloro acetic acid - tRNA transfer ribonucleic acid; trp1 to trp5 refer to the structural genes for the corresponding tryptophan biosynthetic enzymes - trpl res. trp1± refer to mutant strains synthesizing completely resp. partially defective enzymes  相似文献   

20.
Mutant strains of Escherichia coli K-12 have been isolated in which the synthesis of 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonic acid-7-phosphate (DAHP) synthetase (trp) is partially constitutive. The mutation causing derepression is closely linked to aroH [the structural gene for DAHP synthetase (trp)] and occurs in a locus designated aroJ. The aroJ mutation is not recessive in an aroJ(+)/aroJ(-) diploid strain, as the synthesis of DAHP synthetase (trp) is still derepressed in this strain. On the basis of its close linkage to aroH and its continued expression in an aroJ(+)/aroJ(-) diploid, it is postulated that aroJ is an operator locus controlling the expression of the structural gene aroH. In support of this conclusion, the synthesis of anthranilate synthetase is still normally repressible in aroJ(-) strains, whereas, in trpR(-) strains, both DAHP synthetase (trp) and anthranilate synthetase are synthesized constitutively. The synthesis of DAHP synthetase (trp) remains repressible in an operator-constitutive mutant of the tryptophan operon. In two trpS mutants which possess defective tryptophanyl transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase enzymes, neither DAHP synthetase (trp) nor anthranilate synthetase derepress under conditions in which the defective synthetase causes a decrease in growth rate. On the other hand, an effect of the trpS mutant alleles on the level of anthranilate synthetase has been observed in strains which are derepressed for the synthesis of this enzyme, because of a mutation in the gene trpR. Possible explanations for this effect are presented.  相似文献   

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