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. 1966 Aug;100(2):517-24.
doi: 10.1042/bj1000517.

The control mechanism of thiamine biosynthesis a model for the study of control of converging pathways

The control mechanism of thiamine biosynthesis a model for the study of control of converging pathways

P C Newell et al. Biochem J. 1966 Aug.

Abstract

1. Thiamine or the pyrimidine moiety of thiamine added in excess to a growing culture of Salmonella typhimurium LT2 repressed subsequent thiamine synthesis in non-growing organisms. 2. A mutant unable to convert added pyrimidine moiety into thiamine was not repressible by the pyrimidine, showing that thiamine, not the pyrimidine, was the repressor. 3. Thiamine repression occurred at 40mmug. of thiamine/mg. dry wt. or above and de-repression occurred at 30mmug. of thiamine/mg. dry wt. or below. 4. Thiamine controlled the pyrimidine and thiazole pathways at the same concentration and to the same extent. 5. Biosynthesis of the thiazole moiety had, in contrast with biosynthesis of the pyrimidine moiety, an additional feedback inhibition control that allowed utilization of the exogenous thiazole. 6. The enzymes joining the pyrimidine and thiazole moieties were repressible by high concentrations of thiamine. 7. Thiamine was rapidly converted into thiamine pyrophosphate and this appeared to be the active repressor. 8. Theoretical aspects of control of converging pathways are discussed.

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References

    1. Biochem J. 1966 Aug;100(2):512-6 - PubMed
    1. J Bacteriol. 1964 Oct;88:1024-9 - PubMed
    1. Appl Microbiol. 1954 Jan;2(1):29-33 - PubMed

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