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Nitrogen metabolism feedback inhibition

Feedback inhibition of amino acid transporters by amino acids synthesized by the cells might be responsible for the well known fact that blocking protein synthesis by cycloheximide in Saccharomyces cerevisiae inhibits the uptake of most amino acids [56]. Indeed, under these conditions, endogenous amino acids continue to accumulate. This situation, which precludes studying amino acid transport in yeast in the presence of inhibitors of protein synthesis, is very different from that observed in bacteria, where amino acid uptake is commonly measured in the presence of chloramphenicol in order to isolate the uptake process from further metabolism of accumulated substances. In yeast, when nitrogen starvation rather than cycloheximide is used to block protein synthesis, this leads to very high uptake activity. This fact supports the feedback inhibition interpretation of the observed cycloheximide effect. [Pg.233]


See other pages where Nitrogen metabolism feedback inhibition is mentioned: [Pg.703]    [Pg.703]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.1413]    [Pg.1012]    [Pg.699]    [Pg.671]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.675]    [Pg.704]    [Pg.797]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.1549]    [Pg.1556]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.674 , Pg.698 , Pg.699 ]




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