Saccharomyces diastaticus produces an extracellular glucoamylase and is therefore capable of hydrolyzing and fermenting starch. Tamaki (1978) studied starch utilization in S. diastaticus and found three polymeric genes controlling this function: STA1, STA2 and STA3. Independently, Erratt and Stewart (1978) studied dextrin utilization by the yeast S. diastaticus and designated the gene, which they identified, DEX1. Erratt and Stewart (1981 a, b) later described two other genes which controlled glucoamylase production in S. diastaticus: DEX2 and a third which was allelic to STA3. At that time STA1 and STA2 were not available to test for allelism in the DEX gene family. In this study strains containing the remaining 4 genes have been examined to determine if further allelism exists between the two gene families. It was ascertained that DEX1 is allelic to STA2 and DEX2 is allelic to STA1. Therefore, no new gene controlling starch utilization has been identified and these two nomenclatures can now be consolidated into one. Based on the fact that the glucoamylase from S. diastaticus can hydrolyze both dextrin and starch, dextrin being the term used to describe partially hydrolyzed starch, and the more wide use of the nomenclature STA, we propose to retain STA as the designation for genes coding for glucoamylase production in S. diastaticus.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00331646 | DOI Listing |
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