An enzyme aggregate in the tryptophan pathway of Neurospora crassa.
- 1 July 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 54 (1) , 241-247
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.54.1.241
Abstract
The 1st enzyme in the tryptophan pathway of N. crassa, anthranilate synthetase, is controlled by 2 genetic loci, the tryp-1 and tryp-2 loci. The tryp-1 locus also controls 2 other enzymes in the tryptophan pathway PRA [N-(5[image]-phosphoribosyl) anthranilate] isomerase and InGP [indole-3-glycerolphosphate] synthetase. As a result, mutations at the tryp-1 locus lead to the loss of either anthranilate synthetase or InGP synthetase and PRA isomerase, or, as is usually the case, all 3. On the other hand, mutations at the tryp-2 locus result in the loss of anthranilate synthetase activity only. Anthranilate synthetase, PRA isomerase, and InGP synthetase activities are present in constant ratios over a 90-fold purification range and exhibit identical profiles on zone centrlfugation analysis. These activities are apparently catalyzed by a molecular aggregate which results from the direct interaction of the gene products of the tryp-1 and tryp-2 loci.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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