Temperature-sensitive variants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae iso-1-cytochrome c produced by random mutagenesis of codons 43 to 54
- PMID: 1656051
- DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(91)80207-b
Temperature-sensitive variants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae iso-1-cytochrome c produced by random mutagenesis of codons 43 to 54
Abstract
In vitro random mutagenesis within the CYC1 gene from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to produce a library of mutants encompassing codons 43 to 54 of iso-1-cytochrome c. This region consists of an evolutionarily conserved structure within an evolutionarily diverse sequence. The library, on a low-copy-number yeast shuttle phagemid, was introduced into a yeast strain lacking cytochrome c. The ability of transformants harboring a functional cytochrome c to grow on the non-fermentable carbon source glycerol at 30 degrees C and 37 degrees C was used to determine the phenotype of nearly 1000 transformants. Approximately 90% of the missense mutants present in the library give rise to the wild-type phenotype, 7% result in the temperature-sensitive (Cycts) phenotype, and 3% give rise to the non-functional (Cyc-) phenotype. Phagemids from 20 Cycts and 30 Cyc- transformants were subjected to DNA sequence analysis. All the mutations occur within the targeted region. One-third of the mutants from Cyc- transformants and all the mutants from Cycts transformants are missense mutants. The remaining mutants from Cyc- transformants are nonsense or frame-shift mutants. Missense mutations within the codons for Gly45, Tyr46, Thr49, Asn52 or Ile53 alone are sufficient to produce temperature-sensitive behavior both in vivo and in the variant proteins. The deduced amino acid substitutions correlate remarkably well with side-chain dynamics, secondary structure and tertiary structure of the wild-type protein.
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