Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES
Description
Abstract Text
The goal of this research project is to characterize the role of
compartmentation in the regulation of amino acid metabolism in Neurospora
crassa. The organellar localization of metabolic pathways requires
considerable expenditure of metabolic energy for protein targeting,
organelle assembly, and movement of substrates and products across
intracellular membranes. Such expenditures must result in biological
efficiencies commensurate with the investment of biological resources.
However, it is not always clear what advantages are conferred by such
compartmentation. Some general hypotheses have been advanced to explain
this compartmentation phenomenon. These include the achievement of high
localized concentrations of intermediary metabolites, the isolation of
potentially reactive intermediates, the separation of potentially
competing reactions and the conservation of solvent capacity. In N.
crassa, the biosynthesis of arginine originates in the mitochondria but
culminates in the cytosol. Intermediary metabolites (ornithine and
citrulline) and the end product (arginine) cross both mitochondrial
membranes: ornithine to support polyamine synthesis in the cytosol;
citrulline to complete arginine synthesis in the cytosol; and arginine
to support mitochondrial protein synthesis. In order to evaluate various
hypotheses for the role of metabolic compartmentation, the metabolic and
physiological consequences of relocating the arginine biosynthetic
enzymes from the mitochondrial matrix to the cytosol will be
investigated. Genes for the arginine biosynthetic enzymes leading to
citrulline synthesis will be cloned and characterized. Amino acid
sequences responsible for targeting the cytosolic precursors to the
mitochondria will be identified. The cloned genes will be altered in
vitro so that the catalytically active enzymes that they encode will be
confined to the cytosol. Where possible, the functionality of the
altered genes will be tested by inserting them downstream of a yeast
promoter and testing their ability to complement mutations in the
homologous yeast genes whose products normally function in the cytosol.
The altered genes, arg*, or the homologous yeast (or bacterial) genes
inserted downstream of a Neurospora promoter, will be introduced into the
appropriate neurospora mutants. Strains carrying multiple altered genes
will be constructed by genetic recombination. The consequences of enzyme
relocation will be determined by examining the effects of enzyme
mislocation on the efficiency of arginine biosynthesis, the channeling
of carbamyl-phosphate and ornithine, and the operation of the potentially
futile "urea cycle". The results will contribute to our understanding
of the function of metabolic compartmentation in eukaryotic cells.
Impairment or alterations in compartmentation are the basis of a variety
of human disorders.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM047631-02
Publications
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