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Killer Toxin from Hansenula Mrakii Selectively Inhibits Cell Wall Synthesis in a Sensitive Yeast

Overview
Journal FEBS Lett
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1986 Mar 3
PMID 3512308
Citations 19
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Abstract

Hansenula mrakii secretes extracellularly a killer toxin which kills sensitive Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In protoplasts of this yeast, the killer toxin selectively inhibited the synthesis of alkali-insoluble acid-insoluble polysaccharides consisting mainly of beta-glucan, but did not inhibit either the synthesis of other cell wall polysaccharides, such as mannan, chitin and alkali-insoluble acid-soluble polysaccharides, or the synthesis of protein. Consistent with these results, the toxin was inhibitory to the beta-(1,3)-glucan synthetase activity of a cell-free extract from sensitive S. cerevisiae.

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