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1.4: The Function of Genes

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    27216
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    Beadle and Tatum: one gene, one enzyme hypothesis

    Life depends on (bio)chemistry to supply energy and to produce the molecules to construct and regulate cells. In 1908, A. Garrod described “in born errors of metabolism” in humans using the congenital disorder, alkaptonuria (black urine disease), as an example of how “genetic defects” led to the lack of an enzyme in a biochemical pathway and caused a disease (phenotype). Over 40 years later, in 1941, Beadle and Tatum built on this connection between genes and metabolic pathways. Their research led to the “one gene, one enzyme (or protein)” hypothesis, which states that each of the enzymes that act in a biochemical pathway is encoded by a different gene. Although we now know of many exceptions to the “one gene, one enzyme (or protein)” principle, it is generally true that each different gene produces a protein that has a distinct catalytic, regulatory, or structural function.

    Beadle and Tatum used the fungus Neurospora crassa (a mold) for their studies because it had practical advantages as a laboratory organism. They knew that Neurospora was prototrophic, meaning that it could synthesize its own amino acids when grown on minimal medium, which lacked most nutrients except for a few minerals, simple sugars, and one vitamin (biotin). They also knew that by exposing Neurospora spores to X-rays, they could randomly damage its DNA to create mutations in genes. Each different spore exposed to X-rays potentially contained a mutation in a different gene. After genetically screening many, many spores for growth, most appeared to still be prototrophic and still able to grow on minimal medium. However, some spores had mutations that changed them into auxotrophic strains that could no longer grow on minimal medium, but did grow on complete medium supplemented with nutrients (Figure \(\PageIndex{12}\)). In fact, some auxotrophic mutations could grow on minimal medium with only one, single nutrient supplied, such as arginine.

    Fig1.12.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{12}\): A single mutagenized spore is used to establish a colony of genetically identical fungi, from which spores are tested for their ability to grow on different types of media. Because spores of this particular colony are able to grown only on complete medium (CM), or on miminal medium supplemented with arginine (MM+Arg), they are considered Arg auxotrophs and we infer that they have a mutation in a gene in the Arg biosynthetic pathway. This type of screen is repeated many times to identify other mutants in the Arg pathway and in other pathways. (Original-Deyholos-CC:AN)

    B&T’s 1 gene: 1 enzyme hypothesis led to Biochemical Pathway dissection using genetic screens and mutations

    Beadle and Tatum’s experiments are important not only for its conceptual advances in understanding genes, but also because they demonstrate the utility of screening for genetic mutants to investigate a biological process – genetic analysis. Beadle and Tatum’s results were useful to investigate biological processes, specifically the metabolic pathways that produce amino acids. For example, Srb and Horowitz in 1944 tested the ability of the amino acids to rescue auxotrophic strains. They added one of each of the amino acids to minimal medium and recorded which of these restored growth to independent mutants. For example, if the progeny of a mutagenized spore could grow on minimal medium only when it was supplemented with arginine (Arg), then the auxotroph must bear a mutation in the Arg biosynthetic pathway and was called an “arginineless” strain (arg-).

    Fig1.13.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{13}\): A simplified version of the Arg biosynthetic pathway, showing citrulline (Cit) and ornithine (Orn) as intermediates in Arg metabolism. These chemical reactions depend on enzymes represented here as the products of three different genes. (Original-Deyholos-CC:AN)

    Synthesis of even a relatively simple molecule such as arginine requires many steps, each with a different enzyme. Each enzyme works sequentially on a different intermediate in the pathway (Figure \(\PageIndex{13}\)). For arginine (Arg), two of the intermediates are ornithine (Orn) and citrulline (Cit). Thus, mutation of any one of the enzymes in this pathway could turn Neurospora into an Arg auxotroph (arg-). Srb and Horowitz extended their analysis of Arg auxotrophs by testing the intermediates of amino acid biosynthesis for the ability to restore growth of the mutants (Figure \(\PageIndex{14}\)).

    Fig1.14.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{14}\): Testing different Arg auxotrophs for their ability to grow on media supplemented with intermediates in the Arg biosynthetic pathway. (Original-Deyholos-CC:AN)

    They found that some of the Arg auxotrophs could be rescued only by Arg, while others could be rescued by either Arg or Cit, and still other mutants could be rescued by Arg, Cit, or Orn (Table \(\PageIndex{1}\)). Based on these results, they deduced the location of each mutation in the Arg biochemical pathway, (i.e. which gene was responsible for the metabolism of which intermediate).

    Table \(\PageIndex{1}\): Ability of auxotrophic mutants of each of the three enzymes of the Arg biosynthetic pathways to grow on minimal medium (MM) supplemented with Arg or either of its precursors, Orn and Cit. Gene names refer to the labels used in Figure \(\PageIndex{14}\)

    MM + Orn

    MM + Cit

    MM + Arg

    gene A mutants

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    gene B mutants

    No

    Yes

    Yes

    gene C mutants

    No

    No

    Yes


    This page titled 1.4: The Function of Genes is shared under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Todd Nickle and Isabelle Barrette-Ng via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.