Catabolites related to tricarboxylic acid cycle affected growth and carotenogenesis in Phaffia rhodozyma. Glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, asparagine and proline at 75 mM of N increased biomass from 2 g l−1 to 2.9–4.7 g l−1 but decreased carotenoid from 420 μg g−1 yeast to 200–260 μg g−1 yeast in strain 67-385. However, simple nitrogen sources did not decrease carotenoid formation. Tricarboxylic acid intermediates repressed carotenogenesis to a less degree than the corresponding amino acids. Carotenoid hyper-producing mutants were impaired in nitrogen utilization. These results indicated that nitrogen assimilation and the concentrations of tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates are involved in regulation of carotenoid biosynthesis.