Abstract

The Drosophila melanogaster Gart locus, known from previous work to encode the enzyme activity phosphoribosylglycinamide formyltransferase (GART), specifies two alternatively processed mRNAs and two proteins. We introduced the entire Gart locus into a Drosophila tissue culture cell line in which the locus is active. The resulting cell clones contained numerous copies of the locus and overproduced both mRNAs and both expected proteins, thus markedly facilitating analysis of these molecules. We assayed extracts of the clones for the activities of 10 enzymes important for de novo purine synthesis and found that, in addition to GART, two other purine pathway activities, phosphoribosylamine-glycine ligase (phosphoribosylglycinamide synthetase, GARS) and phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine cyclo-ligase (phosphoribosylaminoimidazole synthetase, AIRS), are similarly overproduced. All three activities are present together on the larger overproduced protein. A smaller protein appears to possess only GARS activity. Therefore, alternative mRNA processing can allow cells to produce enzyme activities in forms that are either linked or unlinked to other activities.

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