Abstract: | Stable mutants with reduced capacity to produce capsules were isolated from suspensions of Cryptococcus neoformans after treatment of the wild type with a mutagen. The mutants could be assigned one of two phenotypes, hypocapsular or acapsular. Hypocapsular mutants were immunochemically and physicochemically indistinguishable from the wild type, whereas acapsular mutants lacked a major capsular antigen and a negatively charged exterior. In genetic analysis, the mutant trait segregated as a Mendelian gene (1:1) when random basidiospores from an outcross were studied, and analysis of products of single meiotic events from outcrossed mutants was likewise consistent with meiotic segregation. Two-factor crosses yielded the expected four classes of progeny, with recombinants equal to parentals. We concluded that chromosomal genes are responsible for synthesis of the cryptococcal capsule and that random basidiospore analysis represents a useful technique for genetic analysis in this species. |