Control of the flux in the arginine pathway of Neurospora crassa. Modulations of enzyme activity and concentration
- 15 November 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 200 (2) , 231-246
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2000231
Abstract
The influence of particular enzyme activities on the flux of metabolites in a pathway can be estimated by ‘modulating’ enzymes (i.e. changing turnover or concentration) and measuring the response in various parts of the system. By controlling the nuclear ration of two genetically different nuclear types in heterokaryons, the enzyme concentrations at four different steps in the arginine pathway were decreased over a range. This range was extended by the use of bradytrophs, mutant strains specifying enzymes with greatly diminished enzyme activities. Strains altered simultaneously at more than one step were also constructed by genetic recombination. By measuring the outputs of the pathway and the steady-state concentrations of intermediate pools, the fluxes in different parts of the pathway were calculated. This allowed the construction of flux/enzyme relationships, the slope of which is a measure of the sensitivity of a flux to the change in enzyme activity at that step. All fluxes were found to be considerably buffered for quite substantial decreases in the activities of all enzymes. Mass action plays an important part in this phenomenon, as do inhibition and repression. Because of the existence of expansion fluxes in growing systems, we find quantitatively different fluxes in different parts of the single pathway. For the same reason some enzyme modulations given decreased fluxes in one part and increased fluxes in another. The understanding of control in the pathway thus involves consideration of many mechanisms operating simultaneously and the estimation of changes in the whole system. The concept of a ‘rate-limiting step’ is found to be inadequate and is replaced by a quantitative measure, the Sensitivity Coefficient, which takes account of all the interactions. It is shown that control of the flux is shared among all the enzymes of the pathway. The results are discussed in terms of the theory of flux control.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- General Control of Arginine Biosynthetic Enzymes in Neurospora crassaMicrobiology, 1981
- Control of the flux in the arginine pathway of Neurospora crassa. The flux from citrulline to arginineBiochemical Journal, 1980
- Allosteric repression: An AnalysisJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1977
- THE SIMULATION OF THE UREA CYCLE: CORRELATION OF EFFECTS DUE TO INBORN ERRORS IN THE CATALYTIC PROPERTIES OF THE ENZYMES WITH CLINICAL‐BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONSImmunology & Cell Biology, 1977
- Mathematical analysis of multienzyme systems. II. Steady state and transient controlBiosystems, 1975
- Acetylglutamate kinase: A feedback-sensitive enzyme of arginine biosynthesis in neurosporaBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1974
- Control of the flux to arginine in Neurospora crassa: De-repression of the last three enzymes of the arginine pathwayJournal of Molecular Biology, 1974
- A Linear Steady-State Treatment of Enzymatic Chains. A Mathematical Model of Glycolysis of Human ErythrocytesEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1974
- Steady states of general multi‐enzyme networks and their associated properties. Computational approachesFEBS Letters, 1969
- The regulation of pyrimidine biosynthesis in Neurospora crassaBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1964