1980
DOI: 10.1128/jb.144.2.542-551.1980
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Physiological characterization of a Neurospora crassa mutant with impaired regulation of nitrate reductase

Abstract: This report describes the isolation and characterization of a Neurospora crassa mutant with an impaired regulation of nitrate reductase. Glutamine, which prevents the induction of nitrate reductase in N. crassa, did so relatively ineffectively in this mutant. The mutation did not affect the regulation of all enzymes regulated by "nitrogen metabolite regulation"; it did affect the regulation of nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, histidase, and acetamidase, as well as that of thiourea sensitivity. The mutatio… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Mutation analysis has demonstrated that the NMR protein is required to establish nitrogen repression, as nmr mutants are largely insensitive to sufficient glutamine to exert full repression of nitrate reductase synthesis in nmr þ (Premakumar et al, 1980;Tomsett et al, 1981). One intriguing possibility is that the 12-amino-acid carboxy-terminal tail shown above to be essential for nitrogen repression represents a motif that mediates specific NIT2-NMR proteinprotein binding.…”
Section: Nmr Binds To the Nit2 Carboxy-terminal Tailmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Mutation analysis has demonstrated that the NMR protein is required to establish nitrogen repression, as nmr mutants are largely insensitive to sufficient glutamine to exert full repression of nitrate reductase synthesis in nmr þ (Premakumar et al, 1980;Tomsett et al, 1981). One intriguing possibility is that the 12-amino-acid carboxy-terminal tail shown above to be essential for nitrogen repression represents a motif that mediates specific NIT2-NMR proteinprotein binding.…”
Section: Nmr Binds To the Nit2 Carboxy-terminal Tailmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When the cells have an adequate supply of a primary nitrogen source, ammonium ion, glutamate or glutamine, NIT2 does not activate transcription of nit-3 or other genes encoding nitrogen catabolic enzymes, a consequence of nitrogen metabolite repression (Fu and Marzluf, 1987). Mutations in another gene, nmr (for 'nitrogen metabolite repression'), result in the loss of nitrogen repression; nitrate reductase and other related enzymes are expressed in nmr mutants when the cells have sufficient glutamine or ammonia to inhibit their synthesis in the wild type completely (Premakumar et al, 1980;Tomsett et al, 1981). These observations imply that the nmr gene product functions in some aspect of repression.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In N. crassa, the gene nmr-1 has been found to be important for the response to nitrogen metabolite repression. Recessive mutations in this gene result in derepression of some nitrogencontrolled activities, suggesting a negative role for the gene (16,31,32,37). Cloning and characterization of this gene have enabled studies of its role in nitrogen metabolite repression (19,23,24,40).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nmr-I strain of N. crassa has been characterized by its ability to produce nitrate reductase in the presence of the nitrogen metabolite repressor glutamine, which normally prevents synthesis of enzymes involved with the utilization of secondary nitrogen sources such as nitrate (13,25). The ms-S strain has a similar phenotype except that glutamine repression of nitrite reductase, histidase, acetamidase, and L-amino acid oxidase is additionally eliminated (4,21). One possible explanation for the failure of glutamine to repress is that these mutations interfere with glutamine entry into cells.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nmr-l locus has been defined through its release of nitrate reductase from glutamine-mediated nitrogen metabolite repression (13,25). The ms-5 locus similarly relieves glutamine-mediated repression of nitrate reductase production but additionally allows nitrite reductase, histidase, acetamidase, and L-amino acid oxidase production in the presence of glutamine (4,21).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%