Abstract

Synthesis of nitrate reductase protein and increases in nitrate reductase activity occurred in cultures of the yeast Candida nitratophila when they were incubated in medium containing ammonium nitrate. Similar treatment with glutamine plus nitrate resulted in little increase in nitrate reductase activity, in cultures grown previously with reduced nitrogen compounds, and decreases in enzyme activity, in cultures adapted to nitrate. Labelling studies conducted in vivo revealed a rapid cessation of de novo nitrate reductase synthesis when glutamine was supplied to nitrate-adapted cultures in the presence of nitrate. Intracellular glutamine concentrations increased rapidly under these conditions and these cultures exhibited high glutamine: glutamate ratios. As nitrate was taken up in the presence of glutamine in these experiments, it is concluded that the glutamine-stimulated inhibition of nitrate reductase synthesis is a consequence of repression and rapid turnover of nitrate reductase mRNA and not inducer (nitrate) exclusion.

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