In a wild-type strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae the tryptophan analogue DL-5-methyl-tryptophan (5MT) causes only a slight reduction of the growth rate. Uptake experiments indicate that the limited inhibition is partly due to low levels of 5MT inside the cell. On the other hand, this low concentration of 5MT leads to an increase in the activity of the tryptophan-biosynthetic enzymes. Evidence is presented that suggests that 5MT acts primarily through feedback inhibition of anthranilate synthase, the first enzyme of the pathway. A number of 5MT-sensitive mutants have been isolated, characterized, and assigned to one of the following three classes: class I, strains with altered activity and/or feedback sensitivity of anthranilate synthase; class II, strains with elevated uptake of 5MT; class III, mutants with altered regulation of the tryptophan-biosynthetic enzymes, which do not exhibit increases in activity in the presence of 5MT. This failure to exhibit increased enzyme activities in mutants of class III can also be observed after tryptophan starvation. Two mutants of class III show high sensitivity towards 3-amino-1, 2, 4-triazole. They can not exhibit derepression of some histidine-and arginine-biosynthetic enzymes under conditions that lead to an increase in these same enzymes in the wild-type strain.
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