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THE PRODUCT OF THE LEU-3 CISTRON AS A REGULATORY ELEMENT FOR THE PRODUCTION OF THE LEUCINE BIOSYNTHETIC ENZYMES OF NEUROSPORA
Joseph C. Polacco 1 and S. R. Gross 1
1 Division of Genetics, Department of Biochemistry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27710
A class of intracistronic (or closely linked) partial reversions of leu-3 mutations has been found to be conditionally constitutive with respect to the synthesis of isopropylmalate isomerase (specified by the leu-2 cistron) and ß-isopropylmalate dehydrogenase (specified by the leu-1 cistron), two of the enzymes of leucine biosynthesis in Neurospora. The intermediate level of enzyme production by these leu-3cc mutants is independent of the obligatory inducer effector,
-isopropylmalate, but dependent upon the presence of the branched-chain amino acids, isoleucine, valine and leucine. The properties of leu-3+, leu-3 and leu-3cc in heterokaryons indicate that the transnuclear regulatory activity of the leu-3 product varies specifically as a function of available effector molecules. The information presented suggests that the leu-3 cistron is responsible not only for the production of a "positive" regulatory substance necessary for the expression of the leu-1 and leu-2 cistrons, but that it probably serves also a coordinating role in the expression of many of the genes involved in branched-chain amino acid metabolism.
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J. Sze, M Woontner, J. Jaehning, and G. Kohlhaw In vitro transcriptional activation by a metabolic intermediate: activation by Leu3 depends on alpha-isopropylmalate Science, November 13, 1992; 258(5085): 1143 - 1145. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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