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J Bacteriol. 1978 May; 134(2): 528-536
Copyright © 1978 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Arginine Auxotrophic Phenotype of Mutations in pyrA of Salmonella typhimurium: Role of N-Acetylornithine in the Maturation of Mutant Carbamylphosphate Synthetase

Ahmed T. H. Abdelal1, Elizabeth Griego1 and John L. Ingraham2

1 Biology Department, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia 30303
2 Department of Bacteriology, University of California, Davis, California 95616

ABSTRACT

Mutations in pyrA that abolish catalytic activity of carbamylphosphate synthetase cause auxotrophy for both arginine and a pyrimidine. Eight pyrA mutants auxotrophic only for arginine (AUX) were isolated by the mutagenized phage technique; three of these required arginine only at low temperature (20°C). Explanations of the AUX phenotype based on bradytrophy were eliminated by the discovery that blocking the utilization of carbamylphosphate for pyrimidine biosynthesis by insertion of an additional mutation in pyrB (encoding aspartic transcarbamylase) did not reduce the requirement for arginine. In contrast, mutational blocks in the arginine biosynthetic pathway before N-acetylornithine (argB, argC, argG, or argH) did suppress the mutation in pyrA. This suggests that exogenous arginine permits growth of the AUX mutants by inhibiting the first step in the arginine pathway, thereby preventing accumulation of an intermediate that antagonizes mutant pyrA function. A mutation in argA (N-acetylornithinase) failed to suppress AUX, indicating that N-acetylornithine was the inhibitory intermediate. This intermediate had no effect on the catalytic or regulatory properties of carbamylphosphate synthetase from mutant cells grown under permissive conditions (37°C). However, the regulatory properties of carbamylphosphate synthetase synthesized under restrictive conditions (20°C) were demonstrably defective (insensitive to activation by ornithine); the enzyme synthesized under permissive conditions was activated by ornithine. A strain carrying an additional mutation (argC), which prevents the accumulation of N-acetylornithine, produced an ornithine-activatable enzyme at both growth temperatures. These results suggest that N-acetylornithine antagonizes the proper preconditioning or maturation of the mutant carbamylphosphate synthetase.


J Bacteriol. 1978 May; 134(2): 528-536
Copyright © 1978 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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