Abstract: | Temperature-sensitive mutants were derived from Saccharomyces cerevisiae Y5alpha by ethyl methane sulfonate mutagenesis, in a search for mutants that would produce methionine-rich protein at the nonpermissive temperature. A total of 132 mutant strains were selected which showed adequate growth on minimal medium at 25 degrees C but little or no growth on the same medium supplemented with a high concentration (2 mg/ml) of l-methionine at 37 degrees C. Several of these mutants were found to increase the proportion of methionine in their protein to much higher levels than that of the wild-type parent after a temperature shift from 25 to 37 degrees C. Two strains, 476 and 438, which were temperature sensitive only in the presence of methionine, produced cellular protein with methionine contents as high as 3.6 and 4.3%, respectively, when incubated in the presence of methionine. The former strain contained 2.5% methionine even when incubated at 37 degrees C in the absence of methionine. Wild strain Y5alpha, on the other hand, had 1.75% methionine under all conditions tested. Most temperature-sensitive mutants isolated had the same methionine content as the wild strain. It is concluded that the proportion of a specific amino acid, such as methionine, in S. cerevisiae protein can be altered by culturing certain temperature-sensitive mutants at an elevated temperature. |