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Title: Genetic regulation: yeast mutants constitutive for beta-galactosidase activity have an increased level of beta-galactosidase messenger ribonucleic acid. Author: Dickson RC, Sheetz RM, Lacy LR. Journal: Mol Cell Biol; 1981 Nov; 1(11):1048-56. PubMed ID: 6810093. Abstract: Mutants of Kluyveromyces lactis with elevated uninduced levels of beta-galactosidase (EC 32.1.2.3) activity, constitutive mutants (lac10c), were isolated and characterized to determine the basis for their constitutiveness. These lesions are not operator-type regulatory mutants because they are not closely linked to the beta-galactosidase structural gene. In a constitutive strain having a 7-fold increase in beta-galactosidase activity, the concentration of beta-galactosidase messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) was 8- to 10-fold higher than uninduced wild type. The half-life of beta-galactosidase mRNA was the same in the mutant strain (t1/2 = 4.5 +/- 0.2 min) as in uninduced wild-type cells (t1/2 = 4.8 +/- 0.1 min), indicating that the elevated mRNA level in the mutant was not due to a decreased rate of mRNA degradation. Consequently, we hypothesize that the LAC10 product regulates transcription of the beta-galactosidase gene; it probably affects the rate of transcription initiation. Parallel increases in enzyme protein, in constitutive levels of beta-galactosidase activity, and in mRNA further support this position, making translational or posttranslational control by LAC10 unlikely. Several types of data suggest that the LAC10 product functions as a negative regulatory element to prevent transcription. Other data demonstrate that lac10c mutations have pleiotrophic effects, there being constitutive levels not only of beta-galactosidase activity, but also the other lactose-inducible activities of galactokinase (EC 2.7.5.1), galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (EC 2.7.7.10), and lactose transport. It would appear that LAC10 regulates lactose-inducible proteins.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]