Abstract

The activity of three enzymes, aspartokinase, homoserine dehydrogenase, and homoserine kinase, has been studied in the industrial strainSaccharomyces cerevisiae IFI256 and in the mutants derived from it that are able to overproduce methionine and/or threonine. Most of the mutants showed alteration of the kinetic properties of the enzymes aspartokinase, which was less inhibited by threonine and increased its affinity for aspartate, and homoserine dehydrogenase and homoserine kinase, which both lost affinity for homoserine. Furthermore, they showed in vitro specific activities for aspartokinase and homoserine kinase that were higher than those of the wild type, resulting in accumulation of aspartate, homoserine, threonine, and/or methionine/S-adenosyl-methionine (Ado-Met). Together with an increase in the specific activity of both aspartokinase and homoserine kinase, there was a considerable and parallel increase in methionine and threonine concentration in the mutants. Those which produced the maximal concentration of these amino acids underwent minimal aspartokinase inhibition by threonine. This supports previous data that identify aspartokinase as the main agent in the regulation of the biosynthetic pathway of these amino acids. The homoserine kinase in the mutants showed inhibition by methionine together with a lack or a reduction of the inhibition by threonine that the wild type undergoes, which finding suggests an important role for this enzyme in methionine and threonine regulation. Finally, homoserine dehydrogenase displayed very similar specific activity in the mutants and the wild type in spite of the changes observed in amino acid concentrations; this points to a minor role for this enzyme in amino acid regulation.

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