Abstract

The pyrimidine-3 locus of Neurospora crassa specifies a multienzyme complex comprising pyrimidine-specific carbamoyl phosphate synthase (CPSpyr) and aspartate carbamoyl transferase (ACT). It appears to be divided into a translationally proximal CPS-specific region and a distal ACT-specific region. Levels of complementation for ACT activity between pairs of four pyr-3 CPS+ ACT- mutants showed a range from 12% to 68% of the wild-type level of the enzyme. This is interpreted as interallelic complementation, contradicting certain earlier suggestion of two dissimilar ACT subunits. Proteolysis of an extract from a heterokaryon formed from two of the above CPS+ ACT- alleles (alpha and beta) did not lead to loss of ACT activity, but led to the formation of a fragment with ACT activity with a similar molecular weight (92,000 daltons) to that produced in extracts of wild type strain. The pyr-3 polar mutant 43-174 which is enzymatically CPS+ ACT- and which fails to complement with any other CPS+ ACT- alleles, thus suggesting its location towards the proximal end of the ACT region, has CPS activity associated with a form of 180,000 daltons molecular weight. These findings are used to contruct a model for structure of the native enzyme complex.

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