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The expression of the structural genes nit-3 and nit-6, which encode the nitrate assimilatory enzymes nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase, respectively, is highly regulated by the global-acting NIT2 regulatory protein. These structural genes are also controlled by nitrogen catabolite repression and by specific induction via nitrate. A pathway-specific regulatory protein, NIT4, appears to mediate nitrate induction of nit-3 and of nit-6. The NIT4 protein, composed of 1090 amino acids, contains a putative GAL4-like Cys-6 zinc cluster DNA-binding motif, which is joined by a short segment to a stretch of amino acids that appear to constitute a coiled-coil dimerization domain. Chemical crosslinking studies demonstrated that a truncated form of NIT4 forms homodimers. Mobility-shift and DNA-footprinting experiments have identified two NIT4-binding sites of significantly different strengths in the promoter region of the nit-3 gene. The stronger binding site contains a symmetrical octameric sequence, TCCGCGGA, whereas the weaker site has a related sequence. Sequences related to this palindromic element can be found upstream of the nit-6 gene.  相似文献   

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In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the expression of all known nitrogen catabolite pathways are regulated by four regulators known as Gln3, Gat1, Dal80, and Deh1. This is known as nitrogen catabolite repression (NCR). They bind to motifs in the promoter region to the consensus sequence 5′ GATAA 3′. Gln3 and Gat1 act positively on gene expression whereas Dal80 and Deh1 act negatively. Expression of nitrogen catabolite pathway genes known to be regulated by these four regulators are glutamine, glutamate, proline, urea, arginine, GABA, and allantoine. In addition, the expression of the genes encoding the general amino acid permease and the ammonium permease are also regulated by these four regulatory proteins. Another group of genes whose expression is also regulated by Gln3, Gat1, Dal80, and Deh1 are some protease, CPS1, PRB1, LAP1, and PEP4, responsible for the degradation of proteins into amino acids thereby providing a nitrogen source to the cell. In this review, all known promoter sequences related to expression of nitrogen catabolite pathways are discussed as well as other regulatory proteins. Overview of metabolic pathways and promotors are presented.  相似文献   

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Histidine supported good growth of Alcaligenes eutrophus strain H 16 as a nitrogen source, but only poor growth as a carbon and energy source. The facultative chemolithoautotrophic bacterium was also able to utilize urocanic acid, the first intermediate of histidine catabolism. The products of histidine degradation were ammonium, formate and glutamate. Three enzymes of the pathway, histidase, urocanase and formiminoglutamate hydrolase, were present in histidine-grown cells. Two types of spontaneous mutants, derived from the wild type, were characterized by an increased growth rate on histidine. One of these types was found to produce histidase constitutively and at a higher activity compared with the parental strain. The second type of mutant had apparently gained an improved histidine uptake system, which is supposed to be growth rate-limiting in the wild type. From the physiological studies the conclusion was drawn that the control of histidine-degrading enzymes is based on induction by urocanate and catabolite repression by carbon sources supporting fast growth, such as succinate or pyruvate. Ammonium was found not to affect catabolite repression, however, we obtained evidence that histidine uptake is subject to a nitrogen control.Abbreviation CTAB hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide  相似文献   

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In Salmonella typhimurium the two enzymes of proline catabolism, proline oxidase and Delta(1)-pyrroline-5-carboxylic acid dehydrogenase, are subject to catabolite repression when the cells are grown in the presence of glucose. Mutants partially relieved of catabolite repression (PutR) for the proline catabolic enzymes have been isolated by selection on agar plates containing glucose and proline. The specificity of the catabolite repression-insensitive character for the enzymes of proline utilization has been confirmed by an analysis of other unrelated catabolic enzymes. Histidase and amylomaltase of the mutant strains are equally as sensitive to glucose repression as are the enzymes from the wild type. All four PutR mutants exhibit higher induced and higher basal levels of proline oxidase as compared with the corresponding wild-type levels. The mutations of three strains tested are cotransducible with constitutive, pleiotrophic-negative and structural gene mutations of the put region. Three-factor crosses indicate that two putR mutations are located at one end of the cluster of put mutations.  相似文献   

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The structural gene for the major proline permease is located in a tight cluster with genes coding for the proline degradative enzymes, proline oxidase and pyrroline-5-carboxylic acid dehydrogenase. Expression of the permease is regulated in parallel with the two degradative enzymes, and all three functions are subject to catabolite repression. Regulatory mutants (putC) have constitutively high levels of all three activities, suggesting that all are regulated by a single mechanism.  相似文献   

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Nitrogen catabolite repression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae the expression of all known nitrogen catabolite pathways are regulated by four regulators known as Gln3, Gat1, Dal80, and Deh1. This is known as nitrogen catabolite repression (NCR). They bind to motifs in the promoter region to the consensus sequence 5'GATAA 3'. Gln3 and Gat1 act positively on gene expression whereas Dal80 and Deh1 act negatively. Expression of nitrogen catabolite pathway genes known to be regulated by these four regulators are glutamine, glutamate, proline, urea, arginine. GABA, and allantonie. In addition, the expression of the genes encoding the general amino acid permease and the ammonium permease are also regulated by these four regulatory proteins. Another group of genes whose expression is also regulated by Gln3, Gat1, Dal80, and Deh1 are some proteases, CPS1, PRB1, LAP1, and PEP4, responsible for the degradation of proteins into amino acids thereby providing a nitrogen source to the cell. In this review, all known promoter sequences related to expression of nitrogen catabolite pathways are discussed as well as other regulatory proteins. Overview of metabolic pathways and promotors are presented.  相似文献   

10.
Metabolism of nitrogen compounds by yeasts affects the efficiency of wine fermentation. Ammonium ions, normally present in grape musts, reduce catabolic enzyme levels and transport activities for nonpreferred nitrogen sources. This nitrogen catabolite repression severely impairs the utilization of proline and arginine, both common nitrogen sources in grape juice that require the proline utilization pathway for their assimilation. We attempted to improve fermentation performance by genetic alteration of the regulation of nitrogen-assimilatory pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. One mutant carrying a recessive allele of ure2 was isolated from an industrial S. cerevisiae strain. This mutation strongly deregulated the proline utilization pathway. Fermentation kinetics of this mutant were studied under enological conditions on simulated standard grape juices with various nitrogen levels. Mutant strains produced more biomass and exhibited a higher maximum CO2 production rate than the wild type. These differences were primarily due to the derepression of amino acid utilization pathways. When low amounts of dissolved oxygen were added, the mutants could assimilate proline. Biomass yield and fermentation rate were consequently increased, and the duration of the fermentation was substantially shortened. S. cerevisiae strains lacking URE2 function could improve alcoholic fermentation of natural media where proline and other poorly assimilated amino acids are the major potential nitrogen source, as is the case for most fruit juices and grape musts.  相似文献   

11.
l-Amino acid oxidase is synthesized in Neurospora crassa in response to three different physiological stimuli: (i) starvation in phosphate buffer, (ii) mating, and (iii) nitrogen derepression in the presence of amino acids. During starvation in phosphate buffer, or after mating, l-amino acid oxidase synthesis occurred in parallel with that of tyrosinase. Exogenous sulfate repressed the formation of the two enzymes in starved cultures, but not in mated cultures. Sulfate repression was relieved by protein synthesis inhibitors, suggesting that the effect of sulfate required the synthesis of a metabolically unstable protein repressor. With amino acids as the sole nitrogen source only l-amino acid oxidase was produced. Under these conditions enzyme synthesis was repressed by ammonium and was insensitive to sulfate. Biochemical evidence suggested that the l-amino acid oxidase formed under the three different conditions was the same protein. Therefore, the expression of l-amino acid oxidase appeared to be under the control of least two regulatory circuits. One, also controlling tyrosinase, seems to respond to developmental signals related to sexual morphogenesis. The other, controlling other enzymes of the nitrogen catabolic system, is used by the organism to obtain nitrogen from alternative sources such as proteins and amino acids.  相似文献   

12.
The Neurospora crassa genome database was searched for sequence similarity to crnA, a nitrate transporter in Aspergillus nidulans. A 3.9-kb fragment (contig 3.416, subsequence 183190-187090) was cloned by PCR. The gene coding for this nitrate transporter was termed nit-10. The nit-10 gene specifies a predicted polypeptide containing 541 amino acids with a molecular mass of 57 kDa. In contrast to crnA, which is clustered together with niaD, encoding nitrate reductase, and niiA, encoding nitrite reductase, nit-10 is not linked to nit-3 (nitrate reductase), nit-6 (nitrite reductase), or to nit-2, nit-4 (both are positive regulators of nit-3), or nmr (negative regulator of nit-3) in Neurospora crassa. A nit-10 rip mutant failed to grow in the medium when nitrate (< 10 mM) was used as the sole nitrogen source, but grew similarly to wild type when nitrate concentration was 10 mM or higher. In addition, it showed strong sensitivity to cesium in the presence of nitrate and resistance to chlorate in the presence of alanine, proline, or hypoxanthine. The expression of nit-10 required nitrate induction and was subject to repression by nitrogen metabolites such as glutamine. Expression of nit-10 also required functional products of nit-2 and nit-4. The half-life of nit-10 mRNA was determined to be approximately 2.5 min.  相似文献   

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Background  

Industrial fermentation typically uses complex nitrogen substrates which consist of mixture of amino acids. The uptake of amino acids is known to be mediated by several amino acid transporters with certain preferences. However, models to predict this preferential uptake are not available. We present the stoichiometry for the utilization of amino acids as a sole carbon and nitrogen substrate or along with glucose as an additional carbon source. In the former case, the excess nitrogen provided by the amino acids is excreted by the organism in the form of ammonia. We have developed a cybernetic model to predict the sequence and kinetics of uptake of amino acids. The model is based on the assumption that the growth on a specific substrate is dependent on key enzyme(s) responsible for the uptake and assimilation of the substrates. These enzymes may be regulated by mechanisms of nitrogen catabolite repression. The model hypothesizes that the organism is an optimal strategist and invests resources for the uptake of a substrate that are proportional to the returns.  相似文献   

16.
A strain of Cyanidium caldarium has been studied which is able to grow in darkness using amino acids as sole energy sources. During growth ammonia was released into the external medium as a catabolic end product. With either threonine or glutamate similar rates of ammonia formation and similar kinetics of growth were observed. These observations suggest that the amounts of energy made available for cell growth from the two amino acids are equivalent.Deamination of threonine and glutamate by whole cells exhibited similar temperature-dependence profiles and similar Arrhenius energies of activation. Thus it is suggested that a partially common pathway is involved in the catabolism of these amino acids. Threonine dehydrase may play a role in this pathway.The threonine dehydrase of C. caldarium was inhibited by isoleucine and activated by valine. In the absence of isoleucine no cooperative effect of threonine was observed.Succinate or 2-ketoglutarate supported a faster growth than did amino acids. Growth tests in the presence of both a krebs cycle intermediate and an amino acid have shown that the oxidative metabolism of amino acids is in some way controlled by the more suitable energy sources, presumably through catabolite inhibition and catabolite repression.  相似文献   

17.
The increasing amino acid transport activity which occurs during germination of Neurospora crassa is repressed by substrate amino acid. This repression acts on the transport systems similarly to competition in that amino acids within a specific transport class (e.g., basic) repress that system. Repression of the other system (neutral-aromatic) by that amino acid is shown to be repression of the general transport system. The level of repression and the rate of derepression after removal of the amino acid appear to depend on the nonrepressed level and rate. The extent of repression caused by increasing the concentration of the amino acid is shown to be different for two amino acids. A mutant deficient in developmental transport for arginine and phenylalanine contains two mutations. The mutation affecting phenylalanine transport maps on linkage group III and results in an accumulation of phenylalanine in the medium, thus repressing the development of this transport activity.This work was supported in part by a National Institutes of Health, U.S. Public Health Service Traineeship in Genetics (2-T01-GM1316).  相似文献   

18.
Summary Neurospora crassa can utilize various purine bases such as xanthine or uric acid and their catabolic products as a nitrogen source. The early purine catabolic enzymes in this organism are regulated by induction and by ammonium repression. Studies were undertaken to investigate purine base transport and its regulation in Neurospora. The results of competition experiments with uric acid and xanthine transport strongly suggest that uric acid and xanthine share a common transport system. It was also shown that the common transport system for uric acid and xanthine is distinct from a second transport system shared by hypoxanthine, adenine and guanine, and apparently also distinct from the transport system(s) for adenosine, cytosine and uracil. Regulation of the uric acid-xanthine transport system and the hypoxanthine-adenine-guanine transport system was studied. The results reveal that the uric acid-xanthine transport system is regulated by ammonium repression, but does not require uric acid induction. Neither ammonium repression nor uric acid induction controls the hypoxanthine-adenine-guanine transport system. A gene, designated amr, which is believed to be a positive regulatory gene for nitrogen metabolism of Neurospora crassa, was found to dramatically affect both the uric acid-xanthine transport system and the hypoxanthine-adenine-guanine transport system. A model for the action of the amr locus as a positive regulatory gene and for the interaction between the amr gene product and its recognition sites will be discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) has been purified from a collagenolytic Vibrio alginolyticus strain. The apparent molecular weight of the glutamine synthetase subunit was approximately 62,000. This indicates a particle weight for the undissociated enzyme of 744,000, assuming the enzyme is the typical dodecamer. The glutamine synthetase enzyme had a sedimentation coefficient of 25.9 S and seems to be regulated by a denylylation and deadenylylation. The pH profiles assayed by the -glutamyltransferase method were similar for NH4-shocked and unshocked cell extracts and isoactivity point was not obtained from these eurves. The optimum pH for purified and crude cell extracts was 7.9. Cell-free glutamine synthetase was inhibited by some amino acids and AMP. The transferase activity of glutamine synthetase from mid-exponential phase cells varied greatly depending on the sources of nitrogen or carbon in the growth medium. Glutamine synthetase level was regulated by nitrogen catabolite repression by (NH4)2SO4 and glutamine, but cells grown, in the presence of proline, leucine, isoleucine, tryptophan, histidine, glutamic acid, glycine and arginine had enhanced levels of transferase activity. Glutamine synthetase was not subject to glucose, sucrose, fructose, glycerol or maltose catabolite repression and these sugars had the opposite effect and markedly enhanced glutamine synthetase activity.Abbreviations GS glutamine synthetase - SMM succinate minimal medium - ASMM ammonium/succinate minimal medium - GT -glutamyl transferase - SVP snake venom phosphodiesterase  相似文献   

20.
In higher plants, the expression of the nitrate assimilation pathway is highly regulated. Although the molecular mechanisms involved in this regulation are currently being elucidated, very little is known about the trans-acting factors that allow expression of the nitrate and nitrite reductase genes which code for the first enzymes in the pathway. In the fungus Neurospora crassa, nit-2, the major nitrogen regulatory gene, activates the expression of unlinked structural genes that specify nitrogen-catabolic enzymes during conditions of nitrogen limitation. The nit-2 gene encodes a regulatory protein containing a single zinc finger motif defined by the C-X2-CX17-C-X2-C sequence. This DNA-binding domain recognizes the promoter region of N. crassa nitrogen-related genes and fragments derived from the tomato nia gene promoter. The observed specificity of the binding suggests the existence of a NIT2-like homolog in higher plants. PCR and cross-hybridization techniques were used to isolate, respectively, a partial cDNA from Nicotiana plumbaginifolia and a full-length cDNA from Nicotiana tabacum. These clones encode a NIT2-like protein (named NTL1 for nit-2-like), characterized by a single zinc finger domain, defined by the C-X2-C-X18-C-X2-C amino acids, and associated with a basic region. The amino acid sequence of NTL1 is 60% homologous to the NIT2 sequence in the zinc finger domain. The Ntl1 gene is present as a unique copy in the diploid N. plumbaginifolia species. The characteristics of Ntl1 gene expression are compatible with those of a regulator of the nitrate assimilation pathway, namely weak nitrate inducibility and regulation by light.  相似文献   

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