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1.
The micronucleus from vegetative cells of one mating type (O or E) in Paramecium tetraurelia was transplanted by micropipet into amicronucleate cells of opposite mating type (E or O). When autogamy was induced in the recipient cells, they developed new macronuclei and micronuclei derived from the transplanted micronucleus and usually expressed the same mating type as the recipients. The results indicate that micronuclei in the asexual phase may be undetermined for mating type. Recipient E cells in which the macronucleus had been previously removed were transplanted with a whole macronucleus from an O cell. Their mating type was soon transformed E to O before the occurrence of autogamy, and remained O after autogamy. This demonstrates that the transplanted macronucleus determined the O cytoplasmic state to determine the developing zygotic macronucleus for mating type O. It is unlikely that the micronucleus is determined for mating type in O or E cell during the asexual cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Jin H  Carlile C  Nolan S  Grote E 《Eukaryotic cell》2004,3(6):1664-1673
Membrane fusion requires localized destabilization of two phospholipid bilayers, but unrestrained membrane destabilization could result in lysis. prm1 mutant yeast cells have a defect at the plasma membrane fusion stage of mating that typically results in the accumulation of prezygotes that have fingers of membrane-bound cytoplasm projecting from one cell of each pair into its mating partner in the direction of the osmotic gradient between the cells. However, some prm1 mating pairs fuse successfully whereas the two cells in other prm1 mating pairs simultaneously lyse. Lysis only occurs if both mating partners are prm1 mutants. Osmotic stabilization does not protect prm1 mating pairs from lysis, indicating that lysis is not caused by a cell wall defect. prm1 mating pairs without functional mitochondria still lyse, ruling out programmed cell death. No excess lysis was found after pheromone treatment of haploid prm1 cells, and lysis did not occur in mating pairs when prm1 was combined with the fus1 and fus2 mutations to block cell wall remodeling. Furthermore, short (<1 microm) cytoplasmic microfingers indicating the completion of cell wall remodeling appeared immediately before lysis. In combination, these results demonstrate that plasma membrane contact is a prerequisite for lysis. Cytoplasmic microfingers are unlikely to cause lysis since most prm1 mating pairs with microfingers do not lyse, and microfingers were also detected before fusion in some wild-type mating pairs. The lysis of prm1 mutant mating pairs suggests that the Prm1 protein stabilizes the membrane fusion event of yeast mating.  相似文献   

3.
In conjugating pairs of Paramecium caudatum, the micronuclear events occur synchronously in both members of the pair. To find out whether micronuclear behavior is controlled by the somatic macronucleus or by the germinal micronucleus, and whether or not synchronization of micronuclear behavior is due to intercellular communication between conjugating cells, the behavior of the micronucleus was examined after removal of the macronuclei from either or both cells of a mating pair at various stages of conjugation. When macronuclei were removed from both cells of a pair, micronuclear development was arrested 1 to 1.5 hr after macronuclear removal. When the macronucleus of a micronucleate cell mating with an amicronucleate cell was removed later than 3 to 3.5 hr of conjugation, that is, an early stage of meiotic prophase of the micronucleus, micronuclear events occurred normally in the operated cell. These results suggest that most micronuclear events are under the control of the macronucleus and that the gene products provided by the macronucleus are transferable between mating cells. One such product is required for induction of micronuclear division and is provided just before metaphase of the first meiotic division of the micronucleus. This factor is effective at a lower concentration in the cytoplasm and/or is more transferable between mating cells than the factors required for other stages. This factor, which seems to be present at least until the stage of micronuclear disintegration, is able to induce repeated micronuclear division as long as it remains active. The factor can act on a micronucleus which has not passed through a meiotic prophase. Moreover, the results suggest the existence of a second factor which is provided by the macronucleus after the first meiotic division that inhibits further micronuclear division.  相似文献   

4.
An amicronucleate clone of Tetrahymena pyrijormis has been found among the asexual progeny of irradiated cells of strain EU 6000 (variety 6, mating type I). Log-phase cells of this clone, designated EU 6525, have a mean generation time (6.0 hr) longer than that of the micronucleate strain, EU 6000 (2.9 hr). Further irradiation studies of strain EU 6000 indicate that the recovery of viable amicronucleate populations is rare although many amicronucleate cells are found among surviving progeny.1 Attempts to introduce micronuclei into amicronucleate cells of strain EU 6525 by conjugation have been made. Micronucleate lines are obtained from amicronu create pair members only in low frequency. These results, considered together with those of other workers, suggest that some change in the state of the cell, additional to the physical loss (or gain) of the micronucleus, must occur before viable amicronucleate clones can be obtained from micronucleate cells, or before amicronucleate cells can produce viable micronucleate lineages. An alteration in mean generation time may be a reflection of this change, or it may simply be a direct consequence of micronuclear removal. The results further imply that the ciliate micronucleus unquestionably contributes information to the cell during asexual growth and reproduction.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The agalpha1 mutant MAT alpha cells specifically lack the cell surface alpha-type sexual agglutination substance, which is also called alpha-agglutinin. Because the mutant cells (MATalpha agalpha1) can not form aggregates with MATa cells, MATalpha agalpha1 cells are unable to mate with MATa cells when they are co-inoculated in a liquid medium, and the mating is attenuated on solid medium. The attenuated mating ability shown in the previous studies gave us a vague idea about a physiological function of the sexual agglutinability. In order to solve the question, mating behavior of MATalpha agalpha1 cells was investigated here under conditions where the contact between MATa and MAT alpha cells is assisted by physical methods. A synthetic mutation agalpha1::URA3 was constructed and used as well as agalpha1-1 for this study to ensure the genetic defect. When a mixture of MATa and MAT alpha cells was kept on filter membrane placed on relatively dry agar medium, even agalpha1::URA3 mutant cells mated as efficiently as the wild type (AGalpha1) cells did. On filter membrane placed on moist agar medium, agalpha1 mutants mated 10-fold less efficiently than wild type cells did. The mutant cells mated 10000-time less efficiently than the wild type cells in a pellet formed by brief low speed centrifugation. In contrast, the wild type MATalpha cells mated well under all conditions tested. Under the pellet condition, a mixture of MATa and MATalpha AG alpha1 cells formed an extended and cotton-like pellet while a mixture of MATa and MATalpha agalpha1 cells formed a compact and tight pellet. These results suggest that sexual cell agglutination contributes not only to cell contact between MATa and MAT alpha cells thereby stabilizing a-alpha cell pairs, but also to construction of a uniquely organized ultra structure favorable for zygote formation and subsequent growth of diploid cells. The mating specific extended pellet formation was observed also in 4 pairs of a and alpha strains in ascosporogenous yeast genera Hansenula and Pichia.  相似文献   

7.
As for most cell-cell fusion events, the molecular details of membrane fusion during yeast mating are poorly understood. The multipass membrane protein Prm1 is the only known component that acts at the step of bilayer fusion. In its absence, mutant mating pairs lyse or arrest in the mating reaction with tightly apposed plasma membranes. We show that deletion of FIG 1, which controls pheromone-induced Ca(2+) influx, yields similar cell fusion defects. Although extracellular Ca(2+) is not required for efficient cell fusion of wild-type cells, cell fusion in prm1 mutant mating pairs is dramatically reduced when Ca(2+) is removed. This enhanced fusion defect is due to lysis. Time-lapse microscopy reveals that fusion and lysis events initiate with identical kinetics, suggesting that both outcomes result from engagement of the fusion machinery. The yeast synaptotagmin orthologue and Ca(2+) binding protein Tcb3 has a role in reducing lysis of prm1 mutants, which opens the possibility that the observed role of Ca(2+) is to engage a wound repair mechanism. Thus, our results suggest that Prm1 and Fig1 have a role in enhancing membrane fusion and maintaining its fidelity. Their absence results in frequent mating pair lysis, which is counteracted by Ca(2+)-dependent membrane repair.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,99(4):1441-1450
A heat shock-resistant mutant of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was isolated at the mutation frequency of 10(-7) from a culture treated with ethyl methane sulfonate. Cells of the mutant are approximately 1,000-fold more resistant to lethal heat shock than those of the parental strain. Tetrad analysis indicates that phenotypes revealed by this mutant segregated together in the ratio 2+:2- from heterozygotes constructed with the wild-type strain of the opposite mating type, and are, therefore, attributed to a single nuclear mutation. The mutated gene in the mutant was herein designated hsr1 (heat shock response). The hsr1 allele is recessive to the HSR1+ allele of the wild-type strain. Exponentially growing cells of hsr1 mutant were found to constitutively synthesize six proteins that are not synthesized or are synthesized at reduced rates in HSR1+ cells unless appropriately induced. These proteins include one hsp/G0-protein (hsp48A), one hsp (hsp48B), and two G0-proteins (p73, p56). Heterozygous diploid (hsr1/HSR1+) cells do not synthesize the proteins constitutively induced in hsr1 cells, which suggests that the product of the HSR1 gene might negatively regulate the synthesis of these proteins. The hsr1 mutation also led to altered growth of the mutant cells. The mutation elongated the duration of G1 period in the cell cycle and affected both growth arrest by sulfur starvation and growth recovery from it. We discuss the problem of which protein(s) among those constitutively expressed in growing cells of the hsr1 mutant is responsible for heat shock resistance and alterations in the growth control.  相似文献   

9.
Takenaka Y  Yanagi A  Masuda H  Mitsui Y  Mizuno H  Haga N 《Gene》2007,395(1-2):108-115
Cytoplasmic exchange between conjugating cells of Paramecium caudatum has been implicated by mating experiments using wild-type and behavioral mutant cells. To observe macromolecular transport between mating cells, we cloned and expressed the P. caudatum histone H2B gene as a fusion protein attached to an enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) named PcVenus. Significant fluorescent signals derived from histone H2B-PcVenus were detected throughout the macro- and micronuclei of transformant cells after microinjection of the expression vector. The normal growth and high mating reactivity of the transformants indicated that H2B-PcVenus functioned normally. Seven hours after a transformant cell expressing histone H2B-PcVenus was mated with an untransformed complementary mating-type cell, fluorescence derived from histone H2B-PcVenus was emitted from the macronuclei of the untransformed cell. About 48 h later, the fluorescent signal was detected not only in the macro- and micronuclei of untransformed cells but also in the macronuclear anlagen of both mating cells. This suggests that conjugant cells share parental histones during meiosis and subsequent DNA rearrangement. Single-cell RT-PCR analysis demonstrated the presence of H2B-PcVenus mRNA in untransformed cells 15 and 24 h after conjugation. We concluded that at least the mRNA of histone H2B-PcVenus was transferred from the transformed, to the untransformed cell during conjugation.  相似文献   

10.
Haber JE  Garvik B 《Genetics》1977,87(1):33-50
Homothallic strains of Saccharomyes cerevisiae are able to switch efficiently from one mating genotype to another. From a single haploid spore arise both a and mating type cells, which then self-mate to produce a colony consisting almost exclusively of nonmating a/ diploid cells. We have isolated a mutant homothallic strain that gives rise to colonies that show bisexual mating behavior. The mating reaction is always asymmetric, that is, in some colonies a mating is much stronger than mating, while others show greater than a mating.-This mating phenotype arises from the presence of three cell types in a colony: some a/ nonmating diploids and an unequal number of a and haploid cells. The predominant haploid type is that of the original cell that gives rise to the colony. This mixture of cell types arises from a very reduced efficiency of homothallic mating-type interconversions in the mutant strain.-The mutation, designated switch (swi1-1), behaves as a single genetic locus. The mutation is centromere linked, but not linked to the mating type locus or to any of the homothallism genes: HO, HMa and HM. The switch mutation does not affect the efficiency of self-mating, but rather directly affects the frequency of interconversion of mating types.  相似文献   

11.
During Saccharomyces cerevisiae mating, chemotropic growth and cell fusion are critical for zygote formation. Cdc24p, the guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the Cdc42 G protein, is necessary for oriented growth along a pheromone gradient during mating. To understand the functions of this critical Cdc42p activator, we identified additional cdc24 mating mutants. Two mating-specific mutants, the cdc24-m5 and cdc24-m6 mutants, each were isolated with a mutated residue in the conserved catalytic domain. The cdc24-m6 mutant responds normally to pheromone and orients its growth towards a mating partner yet accumulates prezygotes during mating. cdc24-m6 prezygotes have two apposed intact cell walls and do not correctly localize proteins required for cell fusion, despite normal exocytosis. Our results indicate that the exchange factor Cdc24p is necessary for maintaining or restricting specific proteins required for cell fusion to the cell contact region during mating.  相似文献   

12.
Costimulation, a developmental interaction requiring cell-to-cell contact, is the second stage in a linear sequence of events leading from vegetative growth to mating pairs in the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila. This paper uses the kinetics of appearance of genetically marked progeny to measure accurately the duration of normal costimulation and then to examine the role of mating type in costimulation. Although diverse mating types are required for costimulation to occur, the costimulated cell's response is not specific to the mating type of the cell contacting it; costimulation by one mating type appears to prepare a cell for mating with any complementary mating type.  相似文献   

13.
J N Strathern  I Herskowitz 《Cell》1979,17(2):371-381
Homothallic Saccharomyces yeasts efficiently interconvert between two cell types, the mating types a and alpha. These interconversions have been proposed to occur by genetic rearrangement ("cassette" insertion) at the locus controlling cell type (the mating type locus). The pattern of switching from one cell type to the other during growth of a clone of homothallic cells has been followed by direct microscopic observation, and the results have been summarized as "rules" of switching. First, when a cell divides, it produces either two cells with the same mating type as the original cell or two cells that have switched to the other mating type. This observation suggests that the mating type locus is changed early in the cell cycle, in late Gl or during S. Second, the ability to produce cells that have switched mating type is restricted to cells that have previously divided ("experienced cells"). Spores and buds ("inexperienced cells") rarely if ever give rise to cells with changed mating type. A homothallic yeast cell thus exhibits asymmetric segregation of the potential for mating type interconversion--at each cell division, the mother, but not the daughter, is capable of switching cell types in its next division. Homothallic cells also exhibit directionality in switching: experienced cells switch to the opposite cell type in more than 50% of cell divisions. These results show that the process of mating type interconversion is itself controlled during growth of a clone of homothallic cells. By analogy and extension of these results, we propose that multiple cell types can be produced in a specific pattern during development of a higher eucaryote in a model involving sequential cassette insertion.  相似文献   

14.
In Neurospora crassa, strains of opposite mating type generally do not form stable heterokaryons because the mating type locus acts as a heterokaryon incompatibility locus. However, when one A and one a strain, having complementing auxotrophic mutants, are placed together on minimal medium, growth may occur, although the growth is generally slow. In this study, escape from such slow growth to that at a wild type or near-wild type rate was observed. The escape cultures are stable heterokaryons, mostly having lost the mating type allele function from one component nucleus, so that the nuclear types are heterokaryon compatible. Either A or a mating type can be lost. This loss of function has been attributed to deletion since only one nuclear type could be recovered in all heterokaryons except one, but deletion spanning adjacent loci has been directly demonstrated in a minority of cases. Alternatively when one component strain is tol and the other tol+ (tol being a recessive mutant suppressing the heterokaryon incompatibility associated with mating type), escape may occur by the deletion or mutation of tol+, also resulting in heterokaryon compatibility. An induction mechanism for escape is speculated upon.  相似文献   

15.
A double mutant strain, Bacillus subtilis div IV B1 dal trp, has been constructed which grows as filamentous cells and minicells and requires d-alanine for growth. Removal of d-alanine from a growing population of cells resulted in cell bulging 25% of the cell length from one cell pole, followed by cell lysis. Little ultrastructural change in the cell envelope could be detected during bulge formation.  相似文献   

16.
The macronucleus of Paramecium caudatum controls most cellular activities, including sexual immaturity after conjugation. Exconjugant cells have two macronuclear forms: (1) fragments of the maternal macronucleus, and (2) the new macronuclei that develop from the division products of a fertilization micronucleus. The fragments are distributed into daughter cells without nuclear division and persist for at least eight cell cycles after conjugation. Conjugation between heterokaryons revealed that the fragmented maternal macronuclei continued to express genetic information for up to eight cell cycles. When the newly developed macronucleus was removed artificially within four cell cycles after conjugation, the clones regenerated the macronuclear fragments (macronuclear regeneration; MR) and showed mating reactivity, because they were sexually mature. However, when the new macronucleus was removed during later stages, many MR clones did not show mating reactivity. In some extreme cases, immaturity continued for more than 50 fissions after conjugation, as seen with normal clones that had new macronuclei derived from a fertilization micronucleus. These results indicate that the immaturity determined by the new macronucleus is not annulled by the regenerated maternal macronucleus. Mature macronuclear fragments may be "reprogrammed" in the presence of the new macronucleus, resulting in their expression of "immaturity."  相似文献   

17.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae SPA2 protein localizes at sites involved in polarized cell growth in budding cells and mating cells. spa2 mutants have defects in projection formation during mating but are healthy during vegetative growth. A synthetic lethal screen was devised to identify mutants that require the SPA2 gene for vegetative growth. One mutant, called slk-1 (for synthetic lethal kinase), has been characterized extensively. The SLK1 gene has been cloned, and sequence analysis predicts that the SLK1 protein is 1,478 amino acid residues in length. Approximately 300 amino acids at the carboxy terminus exhibit sequence similarity with the catalytic domains of protein kinases. Disruption mutations have been constructed in the SLK1 gene. slk1 null mutants cannot grow at 37 degrees C, but many cells can grow at 30, 24, and 17 degrees C. Dead slk1 mutant cells usually have aberrant cell morphologies, and many cells are very small, approximately one-half the diameter of wild-type cells. Surviving slk1 cells also exhibit morphogenic defects; these cells are impaired in their ability to form projections upon exposure to mating pheromones. During vegetative growth, a higher fraction of slk1 cells are unbudded compared with wild-type cells, and under nutrient limiting conditions, slk1 cells exhibit defects in cell cycle arrest. The different slk1 mutant defects are partially rescued by an extra copy of the SSD1/SRK1 gene. SSD1/SRK1 has been independently isolated as a suppressor of mutations in genes involved in growth control, sit4, pde2, bcy1, and ins1 (A. Sutton, D. Immanuel, and K.T. Arnat, Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:2133-2148, 1991; R.B. Wilson, A.A. Brenner, T.B. White, M.J. Engler, J.P. Gaughran, and K. Tatchell, Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:3369-3373, 1991). These data suggest that SLK1 plays a role in both cell morphogenesis and the control of cell growth. We speculate that SLK1 may be a regulatory link for these two cellular processes.  相似文献   

18.
The phototactic behavior of Chlamydomonas eugametos gametes and vis-à-vis pairs was quantitated using a fully automated, computer-controlled microvideo image analysis system. Two different mt- (mating type minus) and one mt+ (mating type plus) strain, together with the two combinations of pairs were studied. One mt- strain of dark-adapted gametes was non-phototactic while the others were positively phototactic at all effective intensities of white light. The mt+ strain exhibited one of the strongest positive responses that has so far been reported in algae (r-values greater than 0.7). After sexual fusion, the mt+ cell powers the swimming vis-à-vis pair. Its phototactic behavior reversed on fusion, with the pairs swimming away from all effective light intensities, irrespective of whether its partner was formerly phototactic or not. However, when adapted to the dark for an hour or more, vis-à-vis pairs swam positively to the light. The ecological consequence could be that pairs settle and develop into zygotes under intermediate light intensities or at light-dark interfaces.  相似文献   

19.
Mechanism for the Regulation of Cell Division in Agmenellum   总被引:6,自引:4,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
We describe a nonlethal temperature-conditional mutant of Agmenellum quadruplicatum which allows dissociation of the processes of growth and cell division. With this system, evidence has been obtained for the regulation of one step in the process of cell division by a small effector molecule. The effector molecule is apparently released into the surrounding medium and can be obtained from lyophilized spent medium by extraction with 80% ethanol. The addition of this extract to serpentine filaments of the SN29 mutant strain stimulates cell division in these filaments and leads to the production of cells approximating normal dimensions within one generation time. The degree of stimulation of cell division is directly related to the amount of extract added. A general hypothesis is presented for the positive regulation of the initiation of cell wall and cell membrane invagination in this organism.  相似文献   

20.
Electric shock can create parabiotic fusions of living Tetrahymena cells. In this study, cells were mated and successful pairs were electrofused with either vegetatively growing cells or other mating pairs. In particular, we electrofused pairs from normal [diploid x diploid] matings with vegetatively dividing cells in G- or M-phase of the cell cycle. We also fused [diploid x diploid] conjugants with mating pairs involving an aneuploid partner [diploid x "star"], which typically undergo an abortive conjugal pathway termed genomic exclusion. Using such parabiotic fusions we identified and characterized two developmentally critical landmarks: 1) the "abort" signal, which is initiated in pairs with nuclear defects (this first becomes evident soon after the completion of Meiosis I or the beginning of Meiosis II); and 2) the "terminal commitment point", a developmental stage in normal [diploid x diploid] pairs after which conjugation no longer responds to a parabiotically transmitted abort signal (this correlates with the onset of the second postzygotic nuclear division). Finally we demonstrate that a conjugal-arrest-activity varies with the vegetative cell cycle, reaching its highest level of activity during M-phase and dropping just after cytokinesis.  相似文献   

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