Abstract

The growth of Bacillus subtilis TR–44, a prototrophic transductant from one of inosine producers, was completely inhibited by 200 µg/ml of 5-fiuorotryptophan, a tryptophan analogue, and the inhibition was reversed by the addition of L-tryptophan.Several mutants resistant to 5FT* produced L-tryptophan in the growing cultures. The best producer, strain FT–39, which was selected on a medium containing 1500 µg/ml of 5FT, produced 2 g/liter of L-tryptophan, when cultured in a medium containing 8% of glucose but without any tryptophan precursors. In this mutant, anthranilate synthetase, a key enzyme of the tryptophan biosynthesis, had increased over 280-fold, presumably owing to a genetic derepression. From FT–39, mutants resistant to 7000 µg/ml of 5FT were derived. Among them, strain FF–25 produced 4 g/liter of L-tryptophan, twice as much as did the parental strain. Since this strain produced large amount of L-phenylalanine as well as L-tryptophan, the genetic alteration seemed to be involved in some metabolic...

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