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Weiss photo Richard L. Weiss
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, UCLA

Professor

BS, Stanford University; PhD, University of Washington; NIH Fellow; ACS Fellow; NIH Senior Fellow.

 
Research

The major focus of our laboratory is to understand the role of compartmentation of enzymes and metabolites in biological regulation. The organellar localization of metabolic pathways requires considerable expenditure of metabolic energy for protein targeting, organelle assembly, and movement of substrates and products across intracellular membranes. Such expenditures must result in biological efficiencies commensurate with the investment of biological resources. However, it is not always clear what advantages are conferred by such compartmentation.

We have focused our attention on arginine metabolism in Neurospora crassa because it encompasses many of the compartmental features characteristic of eukaryotic cells. Biosynthesis of arginine originates in the mitochondria but culminates in the cytosol. Intermediates and arginine cross both mitochondrial membranes. More than 95% of the intramycelial pool of arginine is sequestered in the vacuoles. Our hypothesis is that these compartmentation features play a significant role in the biology of the organism.

We are investigating the metabolic consequences of relocating the arginine biosynthetic enzymes from the mitochondrial matrix to the cytosol. In addition, we are examining how variations in cytosolic arginine concentrations are communicated across the mitochondrial membranes to coordinately inhibit two enzymes of arginine biosynthesis. Molecular techniques are being used to construct mutants defective in the movement of metabolites across intracellular membranes. Control of arginine degradation is being examined by characterizing the expression, structure and properties of arginase, the initial catabolic enzyme. The results of these experiments will provide insight into the function of enzyme and amino acid compartmentation in eukaryotic cells.

Representative Publications

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Contact Info

Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
UCLA
Box 951569 (post)
607 Charles E. Young Drive East (courier)
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1569

Phone: (310) 825-3621
Fax: (310) 206-4038
Email: weiss@chem.ucla.edu

Group

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