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1.
Summary Each of at least five unlinked MAL loci (MAL1 through MAL4 and MAL6) on the yeast genome controls the ability to synthesize an inducible -D-glucosidase (maltase). A subcloned fragment of the coding sequence of the MAL6 maltase structural gene was used as a hybridization probe to investigate the physical structure of the family of MAL structural genes in the genomes of different Saccharomyces strains. Mal+ strains, each carrying a genetically defined MAL locus, were crossed with a Mal- strain and the segregation behavior of the functional locus and of sequences complementary to the maltase structural gene at that locus analyzed. The maltase structural gene sequences of each MAL locus were detected by Southern blot hybridization using BamH1 digests of genomic DNA of the meiotic products. This restriction enzyme was previously shown to cleave outside the confines of the MAL6 locus.The results of such experiments indicate that each MAL locus encompasses at least one maltase structural gene sequence homologous to that of MAL6, that yeast strains that lack functional MAL loci may or may not contain the corresponding maltase structural gene sequence, that the MAL1 maltase structural gene sequence or one of its alleles can be detected in all laboratory yeast strains examined and that each MAL locus can be identified as a characteristic BamH1 fragment of genomic DNA which includes a maltase structural gene.Yeast strains vary in the number of maltase structural gene sequences that they carry. By using the approach described in this report, the ones corresponding to the different functional MAL loci and residing within a BamH1 generated restriction fragment can be identified.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Fermentation of maltose by Saccharomyces strains depends on the presence of any one of five unlinked MAL loci (MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, MAL4 or MAL6). Earlier mutational analyses of MAL2 and MAL6 containing strains have identified a single complementation group at each of these two loci. However complementation analysis between naturally occurring Mal Saccharomyces strains isolated from the wild demonstrated the presence of two complementation groups (designated MALp and MALg) at the MAL1, MAL3 and MAL6 loci. The available evidence suggests that the MALp gene is functionally equivalent to the complementation group identified by mutational analysis at the MAL6 locus and that this gene encodes a protein involved in the regulation of the coordinate induction of both maltase and maltose permease synthesis.In this paper we report the isolation, in a well characterized MAL1 strain, of 47 mutants unable to ferment maltose. All the mutants, with one exception, map at the MAL1 locus. These mal1 mutants, except for one, are recessive to MAL1 and fall into two major complementation groups. Evidence is presented that these two classes of mutants identify both a gene involved in the regulation of maltose fermentation (MAL1R) and a gene involved in maltose transport (MAL1T). We also report here the isolation of a temperature sensitive maltose nonfermenting mutant mapping at the MAL1 locus identifying a third gene (MAL1S) at this locus. The maltase synthesized by this mutant, when assayed in cell-free extracts, is significantly more thermolabile than the wild type enzyme. Our findings demonstrate that MAL1 is a complex locus comprising at least three genes: MAL1R, a gene involved in the coordinate regulation of the synthesis of maltase and maltose transport; MAL1T, a gene encoding a component of the maltose transport system; and MAL1S, a likely candidate for the structural gene for maltase.  相似文献   

3.
Maltose fermentation in Saccharomyces spp. requires the presence of any one of five unlinked genes: MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, MAL4, or MAL6. Although the genes are functionally equivalent, their natures and relationships to each other are not known. At least three proteins are necessary for maltose fermentation: maltase, maltose permease, and a regulatory protein. The MAL genes may code for one or more of these proteins. Recently a DNA fragment containing a maltase structural gene has been cloned from a MAL6 strain, CB11, to produce plasmid pMAL9-26. We have conducted genetic and physical analyses of strain CB11. The genetic analysis has demonstrated the presence of two cryptic MAL genes in CB11, MAL1g and MAL3g (linked to MAL1 and to MAL3, respectively), in addition to the MAL6 locus. The physical analysis, which used a subclone of plasmid pMAL9-26 as a probe, detected three HindIII genomic fragments with homology to the probe. Each fragment was shown to be linked to one of the MAL loci genetically demonstrated to be present in CB11. Our results indicate that the cloned maltase structural gene in plasmid pMAL9-26 is linked to MAL6. Since the MAL6 locus has previously been shown to contain a regulatory gene, the MAL6 locus must be a complex locus containing at least two of the factors needed for maltose fermentation: the structural gene for maltase and the maltase regulatory protein. The absence of other fragments which hybridize to the MAL6-derived probe shows that either MAL2 and MAL4 are not related to MAL6, or the DNA corresponding to these genes is absent from the MAL6 strain CB11.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Summary We have physically and functionally identified three genes at the MAL6 locus of Saccharomyces carlsbergensis. Using multicopy yeast plasmid vectors, we have subcloned various segments of the entire MAL6 locus. The functional characterization of the MAL6 subcloned regions was determined by (1) analyzing biochemically the levels of MAL-encoded proteins (maltase [-D-glucosidase, E.C. 3.2.1.20] and maltose transport protein) in cells transformed with various MAL6 subclones, and (2) testing the ability of the subclones to complement the maltose fermentation defects of well characterized Mal mutants in the highly homologous MAL1 locus. The physical homology between MAL6 and MAL1 is in part demonstrated by the gene disruption of MAL1 using subcloned MAL6 DNA sequences. The results demonstrate that the MAL6 locus is a complex of at least three genes: MAL6R, MAL6T and MAL6S. These genes specify, respectively, a regulatory function, a maltose transport activity (presumably the maltose permease) and the structural gene for maltase. The functional organization of the MAL6 locus is thus identical to that which we had previously determined by mutational analysis for the MAL1 locus.  相似文献   

6.
Inbred haploid strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae carrying MAL1, MAL2 or MAL6 in a common background have been crossed to each other and to strains carrying no active MAL loci. The kinetics of maltase induction and the induced maltase levels have been examined in the inbred strains and in haploid segregants of the crosses. Differences have been found in the kinetics of induction and induced maltase levels that segregate with the different MAL loci. In the strains tested, the relative rates of maltase induction were MAL2>MAL6>>MAL1; the relative induced maltase levels were MAL2>MAL6~MAL1. These results indicate that MAL1, MAL2 and MAL6 are (or include) regulatory genes that control the accumulation of the enzymes of maltose fermentation.  相似文献   

7.
M. J. Charron  E. Read  S. R. Haut    C. A. Michels 《Genetics》1989,122(2):307-316
The MAL gene family of Saccharomyces consists of five multigene complexes (MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, MAL4, and MAL6) each of which encodes maltose permease (GENE 1), maltase (GENE 2) and the trans-acting MAL-activator (GENE 3). Four of these loci have been mapped and each is located at or near the telomere of a different chromosome. We compare the physical structure of the MAL loci and their flanking sequences. The MAL loci were shown to be both structurally and functionally homologous throughout an approximately 9.0-kb region. The orientation of the MAL loci was determined to be: CENTROMERE . . . GENE 3-GENE 1-GENE 2 . . . TELOMERE. Telomere-adjacent sequences were found flanking GENE 2 of the MAL1, MAL3 and MAL6 loci. No common repeated elements were found on the centromere-proximal side of all the MAL1, loci. These results suggest that, during the evolution of this polygenic family, the MAL loci translocated to different chromosomes via a mechanism that involved the rearrangement(s) of chromosome termini.  相似文献   

8.
In order for a yeast strain to ferment maltose it must contain any one of the five dominant MAL loci. Each dominant MAL locus thus far analyzed contains three genes: GENE 1, encoding maltose permease, GENE 2 encoding maltase and GENE 3 encoding a positive trans-acting regulatory protein. In addition to these dominant MAL loci, several naturally occurring, partially functional alleles of MAL1 and MAL3 have been identified. Here, we present genetic and molecular analysis of the three partially functional alleles of MAL1: the MAL1p allele which can express only the MAL activator; the MAL1 g allele which can express both a maltose permease and maltase; and the mal1(0) allele which can express only maltase. Based on our results, we propose that the MAL1p, MAL1g and mal1(0) alleles evolved from the dominant MAL1 locus by a series of rearrangements and/or deletions of this yeast telomere-associated locus as well as by other mutagenic processes of gene inactivation. One surprising finding is that the MAL1g-encoded maltose permease exhibits little sequence homology to the MAL1-encoded maltose permease though they appear to be functionally homologous.  相似文献   

9.
Maltose and maltotriose are the two most abundant fermentable sugars in brewer’s wort, and the rate of uptake of these sugars by brewer’s yeast can have a major impact on fermentation performance. In spite of this, no information is currently available on the genetics of maltose and maltotriose uptake in brewing strains of yeast. In this work, we studied 30 brewing strains of yeast (5 ale strains and 25 lager strains) with the aim of examining the alleles of maltose and maltotriose transporter genes contained by them. To do this, we hybridized gene probes to chromosome blots. Studies performed with laboratory strains have shown that maltose utilization is conferred by any one of five unlinked but highly homologous MAL loci (MAL1 to MAL4 and MAL6). Gene 1 at each locus encodes a maltose transporter. All of the strains of brewer’s yeast examined except two were found to contain MAL11 and MAL31 sequences, and only one of these strains lacked MAL41. MAL21 was not present in the five ale strains and 12 of the lager strains. MAL61 was not found in any of the yeast strains. In three of the lager strains, there was evidence that MAL transporter gene sequences occurred on chromosomes other than those known to carry MAL loci. Sequences corresponding to the AGT1 gene, which encodes a transporter of several α-glucosides, including maltose and maltotriose, were detected in all but one of the yeast strains. Homologues of AGT1 were identified in three of the lager strains, and two of these homologues were mapped, one to chromosome II and the other to chromosome XI. AGT1 appears to be a member of a family of closely related genes, which may have arisen in brewer’s yeast in response to selective pressure.  相似文献   

10.
Maltose fermentation in Saccharomyces species requires the presence of at least one of five unlinked MAL loci: MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, MAL4, and MAL6. Each of these loci consists of a complex of genes involved in maltose metabolism; the complex includes maltase, a maltose permease, and an activator of these genes. At the MAL6 locus, the activator is encoded by the MAL63 gene. While the MAL6 locus has been the subject of numerous studies, the binding sites of the MAL63 activator have not been determined. In this study, we used Escherichia coli extracts containing the MAL63 protein to define the binding sites of the MAL63 protein in the divergently transcribed MAL61-62 promotor. When a DNA fragment containing these sites was placed upstream of a CYC1-lacZ gene, maltose induced beta-galactosidase. These sites therefore constitute an upstream activating sequence for the MAL genes.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Each one of at least three unlinked STA loci (STA1, STA2 and STA3), in the genome of Saccharomyces diastaticus controls starch hydrolysis by coding for an extracellular glucoamylase. Cloned STA2 sequences were used as hybridization probes to investigate the physical structure of the family of STA genes in the genomes of different Saccharomyces strains. Sta+ strains, each carrying a single genetically defined STA locus, were crossed with a Sta strain and the segregation behavior of the functional locus (i.e. Sta+) and sequences homologous to a cloned STA2 glucoamylase structural gene at that locus were analyzed. The results indicate that in all strains examined there is a multiplicity of sequences that are homologous to STA2 DNA but that only the functional STA loci contain extensive 5 and 3 homology to each other and can be identified as residing on unique fragments of DNA; that all laboratory yeast strains examined contain extensive regions of the glucoamylase gene sequences at or closely linked to the STA1 chromosomal position; that the STA1 locus contains two distinct glucoamylase gene sequences that are closely linked to each other; and that all laboratory strains examined also contain another ubiquitous sequence that is not allelic to STA1 and is nonfunctional (Sta), but has retained extensive sequence homology to the 5 end of the cloned STA2 gene. It was also determined that the DEX genes (which control dextrin hydrolysis in S. diastaticus), MAL5 (a gene once thought to control maltose metabolism in yeast) and the STA genes are allelic to each other in the following manner: STA1 and DEX2, STA1 and MAL5, and STA2 and DEX1 and STA3 and DEX3.  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
In this study, the effects of inositol addition on expression of the MAL gene encoding maltase and phosphatidylinositol (PI) biosynthesis in Schizosaccharomyces pombe (a naturally inositol-requiring strain) were examined. We found that specific maltase activity was at its maximum when the concentration of added inositol reached 6 μg ml−1 in a synthetic medium containing 2.0% (w/v) glucose. When the concentration of added inositol was 1 μg ml−1 in the medium, repression of MAL gene expression occurred at glucose concentration higher than 0.2% (w/v). However, when S. pombe was cultured in the synthetic medium containing 6 μg ml−1, repression of maltase gene expression occurred only at initial glucose concentration above 1.0% (w/v). More mRNA encoding maltase was detected in the cells grown in the medium with 6 μg ml−1 inositol than in those grown in the same medium with 1 μg ml−1 inositol. These results demonstrate that higher inositol concentrations in the synthetic medium could derepress MAL gene expression in S. pombe. PI content of the yeast cells grown in the synthetic medium with 6 μg ml−1 of inositol was higher than that of the yeast cells grown in the same medium with 1 μg ml−1 of inositol. This means that PI may be involved in the derepression of MAL gene expression in S. pombe.  相似文献   

15.
Control of maltase synthesis in yeast   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Maltose fermentation in Saccharomyces species requires the presence of at least one of five unlinked MAL loci: MAL1, MAL2, MAL3, MAL4 and MAL6. Each MAL locus is complex consisting of at least three genes: a trans-acting activator, a maltose permease, and maltase. All the MAL loci show homology to each other both at the sequence level as determined by Southern transfer analysis and at the functional level as determined by complementation. We describe the organization of the MAL loci in yeast and the basic features of their regulation. The analysis of MAL has contributed to our understanding of the evolution of multigenic families, the global integration of carbohydrate metabolism, and gene regulation.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Mutations resulting in constitutive production of maltase have been identified at each of the five MAL loci of Saccharomyces yeasts. Here we examine a dominant constitutive, glucose-repression-insensitive allele of the MAL4 locus (MAL4-C). Our results demonstrate that MAL4-C is an alteration in the MAL43 gene, which encodes the positive regulator of the MAL structural genes, and that its product is trans-acting. The MAL43 gene from the MAL4-C strain was cloned and integrated into a series of nonfermenting strains lacking a functional regulatory gene but carrying copies of the maltose permease and maltase structural genes. Expression of the maltase structural gene was both constitutive and insensitive to glucose repression in these transformants. The MAL4-C allele also results in constitutive expression of the unlinked MAL12 gene (encoding maltase) in this strain. In addition, the cloned MAL43 gene was shown to be dominant to the wild-type MAL63 gene. We also show that most of the glucose repression insensitivity of strains carrying the MAL4-C allele results from alteration of MAL43.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Yeast DNA pools were prepared by ligating partial Sau3A genomic digests from strains carrying various MAL genes into the BamHI site of the yeast-Escherichia coli shuttle vector YRp7. They were used to transform recipient yeast strains that could not utilize maltose since they lacked a classical MAL gene. Transformants were obtained that could use maltose and also formed normal levels of maltase. They were unstable. They would lose the selective marker TRP1 of YRp7 alone, together with the ability to utilize maltose or only the ability to utilize maltose. The insertion of one of the plasmids was used as a hybridization probe for the others and found to share homologous sequences with all. They were then shown to contain the replication origin of the yeast 2 m circle plasmid and additional genomic digests of total yeast DNA. They hybridized at various degrees of efficiency with several bands, indicating that they were part of a family of repeated sequences. Apparently, it was the combination of the replication origin of the 2 m circles with the additional sequences that promoted maltose utilization.  相似文献   

19.
Maltose fermentation in Saccharomyces spp. requires the presence of a dominant MAL locus. The MAL6 locus has been cloned and shown to encode the structural genes for maltose permease (MAL61), maltase (MAL62), and a positively acting regulatory gene (MAL63). Induction of the MAL61 and MAL62 gene products requires the presence of maltose and the MAL63 gene. Mutations within the MAL63 gene produce nonfermenting strains unable to induce the two structural gene products. Reversion of these mal63 nonfermenters to maltose fermenters nearly always leads to the constitutive expression of maltase and maltose permease, and constitutivity is always linked to MAL6. We demonstrated that for one such revertant, strain C2, constitutivity did not require the MAL63 gene, since deletion disruption of this gene did not affect the constitutive expression of the structural genes. In addition, constitutivity was trans acting. Deletion disruption of the MAL6-linked structural genes for maltase and maltose permease in this strain did not affect the constitutive expression of a second, unlinked maltase structural gene. We isolated new maltose-fermenting revertants of a nonfermenting strain which carried a deletion disruption of the MAL63 gene. All 16 revertants isolated expressed maltase constitutively. In one revertant studied in detail, strain R10, constitutive expression was demonstrated to be linked to MAL6, semidominant, trans acting, and residing outside the MAL63-MAL61-MAL62 genes. From these studies we propose the existence of a second trans-acting regulatory gene at the MAL6 locus. We call this new gene MAL64. We mapped the MAL64 gene 2.3 centimorgans to the left of MAL63. The role of the MAL64 gene product in maltose fermentation is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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