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REGULATORY MUTANTS AT THE his1 LOCUS OF YEAST
Carol Lax 1, Seymour Fogel 1, and Carole Cramer 1
1 Department of Genetics, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
The his1 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae codes for phosphoribosyl transferase, an allosteric enzyme that catalyzes the initial step in histidine biosynthesis. Mutants that specifically alter the feedback regulatory function were isolated by selecting his1 prototrophic revertants that overproduce and excrete histidine. The prototrophs were obtained from diploids homoallelic for his17 and heterozygous for the flanking markers thr3 and arg6. Among six independently derived mutant isolates, three distinct levels of histidine excretion were detected. The mutants were shown to be second-site alterations mapping at the his1 locus by recovery of the original auoxtrophic parental alleles. The double mutants, HIS17e, are dominant with respect to catalytic function but recessive in regulatory function. When removed from this his17 background, the mutant regulatory site (HIS1e) still confers prototrophy but not histidine excretion. To yield the excretion phenotype, the primary and altered secondary sites are required in cis array. Differences in histidine excretion levels correlate with resistance to the histidine analogue, triazoalanine.
Submitted on February 25, 1978Revised on September 7, 1978