Neurospora
irradiated to
increase mutations
wild, untreated
Neurospora
minimal
medium
mated
fruiting body meiosis
growth
occurs
spore
case
complete
medium
individual
spore placed
on medium
fungi
transferred
mutant fungi
transferred
growth
occurs on
complete
medium
fungi that
do not
grow are
mutants
growth
occurs on
minimal
medium
supplemented
with various
amino acids
minimal
medium
fungi transferred
minimal medium
supplemented
with only one
amino acid
choline nucleic acid arginine niacin thiamine control
242 MHR • Unit 3 Molecular Genetics
they were able (in many cases) to identify the
specific stage in a metabolic pathway that was
blocked by a particular mutation. This work,
illustrated above in Figure 7.30, led them to
conclude that each mutant variety of the mould
had one defective gene that caused the mould to be
deficient in one enzyme that catalyzed a particular
step in a given metabolic pathway. Their
hypothesis became known as the one gene-one
enzyme theory of gene function.
In the years that followed, this functional
definition was broadened to one gene-one protein,
since some genes were found to code for proteins
other than enzymes. (Examples include structural
proteins such as collagen and the silk of spider
webs.) This definition was later modified to one
gene-one polypeptide when scientists found that
the different polypeptides in a single protein
complex may be coded for by entirely separate
genes. An example of this is hemoglobin —
different genes code for each of the two types of
polypeptide sub-units that make up one
hemoglobin molecule.
In short, the precise functional definition of a
gene has become more complex as scientists have
learned more about how genes work. The one
gene-one polypeptide theory still does not account
for all aspects of gene function. In eukaryotes, a
single gene can code for several different polypeptide
products. Other genes code for the synthesis of
Figure 7.30Beadle and Tatum isolated mutant strains of
the mould that could grow on a complete medium but not
on a minimal medium. By gradually adding one nutrient at a
time to the minimal medium, they were able to isolate
different mutant strains. Here, the mutant strain isolated
lacks the ability to produce arginine, and so will grow only
on a medium in which this nutrient has been added.