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Irving P. Crawford

Weber State University

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Biochemical and Molecular Research, Enzyme Structure and Function. 112 papers and 6.5k citations.

112Publications
6.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Identification and characterization of genes for a second anthranilate synthase in Pseudomonas aeruginosa: interchangeability of the two anthranilate synthases and evolutionary implications
D W Essar, L Eberly, A Hadero et al.|Journal of Bacteriology|1990
Cited by 929Open Access

Two anthranilate synthase gene pairs have been identified in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. They were cloned, sequenced, inactivated in vitro by insertion of an antibiotic resistance gene, and returned to P. aeruginosa, replacing the wild-type gene. One anthranilate synthase enzyme participates in tryptophan synthesis; its genes are designated trpE and trpG. The other anthranilate synthase enzyme, encoded by phnA and phnB, participates in the synthesis of pyocyanin, the characteristic phenazine pigment of the organism. trpE and trpG are independently transcribed; homologous genes have been cloned from Pseudomonas putida. The phenazine pathway genes phnA and phnB are cotranscribed. The cloned phnA phnB gene pair complements trpE and trpE(G) mutants of Escherichia coli. Homologous genes were not found in P. putida PPG1, a non-phenazine producer. Surprisingly, PhnA and PhnB are more closely related to E. coli TrpE and TrpG than to Pseudomonas TrpE and TrpG, whereas Pseudomonas TrpE and TrpG are more closely related to E. coli PabB and PabA than to E. coli TrpE and TrpG. We replaced the wild-type trpE on the P. aeruginosa chromosome with a mutant form having a considerable portion of its coding sequence deleted and replaced by a tetracycline resistance gene cassette. This resulted in tryptophan auxotrophy; however, spontaneous tryptophan-independent revertants appeared at a frequency of 10(-5) to 10(6). The anthranilate synthase of these revertants is not feedback inhibited by tryptophan, suggesting that it arises from PhnAB. phnA mutants retain a low level of pyocyanin production. Introduction of an inactivated trpE gene into a phnA mutant abolished residual pyocyanin production, suggesting that the trpE trpG gene products are capable of providing some anthranilate for pyocyanin synthesis.

The complete nucleotide sequence of the tryptophan operon of Escherichia coli
Charles Yanofsky, Terry Platt, Irving P. Crawford et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|1981
Cited by 348Open Access

The tryptophan (trp) operon of Escherichia coli has become the basic reference structure for studies on tryptophan metabolism. Within the past five years the application of recombinant DNA and sequencing methodologies has permitted the characterization of the structural and functional elements in this gene cluster at the molecular level. In this summary report we present the complete nucleotide sequence for the five structural genes of the trp operon of E. coli together with the internal and flanking regions of regulatory information.

EVOLUTION OF A BIOSYNTHETIC PATHWAY: THE TRYPTOPHAN PARADIGM
Irving P. Crawford|Annual Review of Microbiology|1989
Cited by 209

Article de synthese sur la voie de biosynthese du tryptophane chez les bacteries. Anthranilate synthase. Phosphoribosyltransferase. Indoleglyceral phosphate synthase-N-Phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase. Tryptophane synthase. Attenuation. Les sequences conservees des genes Trp des bacteries sont donnees en appendice