A mutation affecting expression of the gene coding for serine transacetylase in Salmonella typhimurium |
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Authors: | M. Danuta Hulanicka and Nicholas M. Kredich |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland;(2) Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, 27710 Durham, North Carolina;(3) Department of Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center, 27710 Durham, North Carolina |
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Abstract: | Summary A 1,2,4-triazole resistant mutant of S. typhimurium has been isolated, in which serine transacetylase activity is seven times higher than in wild type. Partially purified serine transacetylase from a strain carrying the trz-312 mutation has kinetic properties which are virtually identical to those of the wild type enzyme and binds to O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase A to form a cysteine synthetase complex which is also indistinguishable from that found in wild type. Thus the increased activity of serine transacetylase associated with trz-312 appears to result from increased quantities of a kinetically normal, enzyme protein. Resistance to 1,2,4-triazole is probably due to the ability of trz-312 strains to synthesize O-acetyl-l-serine at a rapid enough rate to compensate for that utilized by the O-acetylserine triazolylase reaction.Genetic mapping experiments, using P1-mediated transduction, show that trz-312 is 91–99% linked to cysE, the structural gene for serine transacetylase. The results of three point crosses indicate that this mutation is located at one extreme end of the cysE locus, as would be expected for a promotor mutation. |
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