| Literature DB >> 234746 |
J Daniel, M P Roisin, C Burstein, A Kepes.
Abstract
Among a number of mutants unable to utilize non-fermentable carbon substrates, scoring for membrane ATPase and for ATP-driven transhydrogenase activity permitted to distinguish two phenotypes: (A) mutants lacking ATPase and ATP-driven transhydrogenase; (B) one mutant with an ATPase which behaved according to several criteria as released into solution instead of being membrane bound, a.o it exhibited no ATP-driven transhydrogenase activity. All A and B mutants exhibited a common nutritional pattern. The ATPase-deficient group, when scored for ATPase-binding sites on its membrane particles revealed three different subgroups: (1) mutants having free ATPase-binding sites, (2) mutants with ATPase-binding sites made available by the procedure which releases ATPase from wild-type membrane, and (3) mutants with no detectable ATPase-binding sites. Membranes of the mutant B with unbound ATPase also exhibited a deficiency in ATPase-binding sites, but its soluble ATPase was also found unable to bind to ATPase-binding sites of wild type membranes. The double alteration, namely abnormal or inactive ATPase and absence of ATPase-binding sites on the membrane is compatible with a single mutational defect.Entities:
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Year: 1975 PMID: 234746 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2728(75)90011-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002