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1.
Homothallic switching of yeast mating type genes occurs as often as each cell division, so that a colony derived from a single haploid spore soon contains an equal number of MATa and MAT alpha cells. Cells of opposite mating types conjugate, and eventually the colony contains only nonmating MATa/MAT alpha diploids. Mutations that reduce the efficiency of homothallic MAT conversions yield colonies that still contain many haploid cells of the original spore mating type plus a few recently generated cells of the opposite mating type. These (a greater than alpha)- or (alpha greater than a)-mating colonies also contain some nonmating diploid cells. As an alternative to microscopic pedigree analysis to determine the frequency of mating type conversions in a variety of mutant homothallic strains, we analyzed the proportions of MATa, MAT alpha, and MATa/MAT alpha cells in a colony by examining the mating phenotypes of subclones. We developed a mathematical model that described the proportion of cell types in a slow-switching colony. This model predicted that the proportion of nonmating cells would continually increase with the size (age) of a colony derived from a single cell. This prediction was confirmed by determining the proportion of cell types in colonies of an HO swi1 strain that was grown for different numbers of cell divisions. Data from subcloning (a greater than alpha) and (alpha greater than a) colonies from a variety of slow-switching mutations and chromosomal rearrangements were used to calculate the frequency of MAT conversions in these strains.  相似文献   

2.
The nonfunctional mutation of the homothallic gene HML alpha, designated hml alpha, produced two mutant alleles, hml alpha-1 and hml alpha-2. Both mutant clones were mixed cultures consisting of a mating-type cells and nonmating haploid cells. The frequencies of the two cell types were different, and a few diploid cells able to sporulate were found in the hml alpha-2 mutant. Conversions of an a mating-type cell to nonmater, and vice versa, were observed in both mutants. The conversion of an a mating phenotype to nonmating is postulated to occur by alteration of the a mating type to the sterile mating-type allele in the hml alpha-1 mutant. In tetrad dissection of prototrophic diploids that were obtained by rare mating of hml alpha-1 mutants with a heterothallic strain having the MATa ho HMRa HMLa genotype, many mating-deficient haploid segregants were found, while alpha mating-type segregants were observed in a similar diploid using an hml alpha-2 mutant. The mating-type-deficient haploid segregants were supposed to have the sterile alpha mating-type allele because the nonmating genetic trait always segregated with the mating-type locus. Sporogenous diploid cells obtained in the hml alpha-2 mutant clone had the MATa/MAT alpha HO/HO HMRa/HMRa hml alpha-2/hml alpha-2 genotype. These observations suggested that the hml alpha-1 allele produces a transposable element that gives rise to the sterile alpha mating type by transposition into the mating-type locus, and that the hml alpha-2 allele produces an element that provides alpha mating-type information, but is defective in the structure for transposition.  相似文献   

3.
A mutation defective in the homothallic switching of mating type alleles, designated hml alpha-2, has previously been characterized. The mutation occurred in a cell having the HO MATa HML alpha HMRa genotype, and the mutant culture consisted of ca. 10% a mating type cells, 90% nonmater cells of haploid cell size, and 0.1% sporogenous diploid cells. Genetic analyses revealed that nonmater haploid cells have a defect in the alpha 2 cistron at the MAT locus. This defect was probably caused by transposition of a cassette originating from the hml alpha-2 allele by the process of the homothallic mating type switch. That the MAT locus of the nonmater cells is occupied by a DNA fragment indistinguishable from the Y alpha sequence in electrophoretic mobility was demonstrated by Southern hybridization of the EcoRI-HindIII fragment encoding the MAT locus with a cloned HML alpha gene as the probe. The hml alpha-2 mutation was revealed to be a one-base-pair deletion at the ninth base pair in the X region from the X and Y boundary of the HML locus. This mutation gave rise to a shift in the open reading frame of the alpha 2 cistron. A molecular mechanism for the mating type switch associated with the occurrence of sporogenous diploid cells in the mutant culture is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
6.
The Genetic System Controlling Homothallism in Saccharomyces Yeasts   总被引:21,自引:7,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
There are four types of life cycles in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its related species. A perfect homothallic life cycle (the Ho type) is observed in the classic D strain. Two other types show semi-homothallism; one of them shows a 2-homothallic diploid:2alpha heterothallic haploid segregation (the Hp type) and another, a 2-homothallic:2a segregation (the Hq type). In the segregants from these Ho, Hp, and Hq diploids, each homothallic segregant shows the same segregation pattern as its parental diploid. The fourth type has a heterothallic life cycle showing a 2a:2alpha segregation and the diploids are produced by the fusion of two haploid cells of opposite mating types. The diploids prepared by the crosses of alpha Hp (an alpha haploid segregant from the Hp diploid) to a Hq (an a haploid from the Hq diploid) segregated two types (Type I and II) of the Ho type homothallic clone among their meiotic segregants. Genetic analyses were performed to investigate this phenomenon and the genotypes of the Ho type homothallic clones of Type I and Type II. Results of these genetic analyses have been most adequately explained by postulating three kinds of homothallic genes, each consisting of a single pair of alleles, HO/ho, HMalpha/hmalpha, and HMa/hma, respectively. One of them, the HMalpha locus, was proved to be loosely linked (64 stranes) to the mating-type locus. A spore having the HO hmalpha hma genotype gives rise to an Ho type homothallic diploid (Type I), the same as in the case of the D strain which has the HO HMalpha HMa genotype (Type II). A spore having the a HO hmalpha HMa or alpha HO HMalpha hma genotype will produce an Hp or Hq type homothallic diploid culture, respectively. The other genotypes, a HO HMalpha hma, alpha HO hmalpha HMa, and the genotypes combined with the ho allele give a heterothallic character to the spore culture. A possible molecular hypothesis for the mating-type differentiation with the controlling elements produced by the HMalpha and HMa genes is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Haber JE  George JP 《Genetics》1979,93(1):13-35
Studies of heterothallic and homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have led to the suggestion that mating-type information is located at three distinct sites on chromosome 3, although only information at the mating-type (MAT) locus is expressed (Hicks, Strathern and Herskowitz, 1977). We have found that the recessive mutation cmt permits expression of the normally silent copies of mating-type information at the HMa and HM alpha loci. In haploid strains carrying HMa and HM alpha, the cmt mutation allows the simultaneous expression of both a and alpha information, leading to a nonmating ("MATa/MAT alpha") phenotype. The effects of cmt can be masked by changing the mating-type information at HMa or HM alpha. For example, a cell of genotype MATa hma HM alpha cmt has an a mating type, while a MAT alpha hma HM alpha cmt strain is nonmating. Expression of mating-type information at the HM loci can correct the mating and sporulation defects of the mata* and mat alpha 10 alleles. Meiotic segregants recovered from cmt/cmt diploids carrying the mat mutations demonstrate that these mutants are not "healed" to normal MAT alleles, as is the case in parallel studies using the homothallism gene HO.--All of the results are consistent with the notion that the HMa and hm alpha alleles both code for alpha information, while HM alpha and hma both code for a information. The cmt mutation demonstrates that these normally silent copies of mating-type and sporulation information can be expressed and that the information at these loci is functionally equivalent to that found at MAT. The cmt mutation does not cause interconversions of mating-type alleles at MAT, and it is not genetically linked to MAT, HMa, HM alpha or HO. In cmt heterozygotes, cmt becomes homozygous at a frequency greater than 1% when the genotype at the MAT locus is mata*/MAT alpha or mat alpha 10/MATa.  相似文献   

8.
In homothallic cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a or alpha mating type information at the mating type locus (MAT) is replaced by the transposition of the opposite mating type allele from HML alpha or HMRa. The rad52-1 mutation, which reduces mitotic and abolishes meiotic recombination, also affects homothallic switching (Malone and Esposito, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77:503-507, 1980). We have found that both HO rad52 MATa and HO rad52 MAT alpha cells die. This lethality is suppressed by mutations that substantially reduce but do not eliminate homothallic conversions. These mutations map at or near the MAT locus (MAT alpha inc, MATa-inc, MATa stk1) or are unlinked to MAT (HO-1 and swi1). These results suggest that the switching event itself is involved in the lethality. With the exception of swi1, HO rad52 strains carrying one of the above mutations cannot convert mating type at all. MAT alpha rad52 HO swi1 strains apparently can switch MAT alpha to MATa. However, when we analyzed these a maters, we found that few, if any, of them were bona fide MATa cells. These a-like cells were instead either deleted for part of chromosome III distal to and including MAT or had lost the entire third chromosome. Approximately 30% of the time, an a-like cell could be repaired to a normal MATa genotype if the cell was mated to a RAD52 MAT alpha-inc strain. The effects of rad52 were also studied in mata/MAT alpha-inc rad52/rad52 ho/HO diploids. When this diploid attempted to switch mata to MATa, an unstable broken chromosome was generated in nearly every cell. These studies suggest that homothallic switching involves the formation of a double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid break or a structure which is labile in rad52 cells and results in a broken chromosome. We propose that the production of a double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid break is the lethal event in rad52 HO cells.  相似文献   

9.
Aimed at investigating the recovery of a specific mutant allele of the mating type locus (MAT) by switching a defective MAT allele, these experiments provide information bearing on several models proposed for MAT interconversion in bakers yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Hybrids between heterothallic (ho) cells carrying a mutant MAT a allele, designated mata-2, and MAT alpha ho strains show a high capacity for mating with MATa strains. The MAT alpha/mata-2 diploids do not sporulate. However, zygotic clones obtained by mating MAT alpha homothallic (HO) cells with mata-2 ho cells are unable to mate and can sporulate. Tetrad analysis of such clones revealed two diploid (MAT alpha/MATa):two haploid segregants. Therefore, MAT switches occur in MAT alpha/mata-2 HO/ho cells to produce MAT alpha/Mata cells capable of sporulation. In heterothallic strains, the mata-2 allele can be switched to a functional MAT alpha and subsequently to a functional MATa. Among 32 MAT alpha to MATa switches tested, where the MAT alpha was previously derived from the mata-2 mutant, only one mata-2 like isolate was observed. However, the recovered allele, unlike the parental allele, complements the matalpha ste1-5 mutant, suggesting that these alleles are not identical and that the recovered allele presumably arose as a mutation of the Mat alpha locus. No mata-2 was recovered by HO-mediated switching of MAT alpha (previously obtained from mata-2 by HO) in 217 switches analyzed. We conclude that in homothallic and heterothallic strains, the mata-2 allele can be readily switched to a functional MAT alpha and subsequently to a functional MATa locus. Overall, the results are in accord with the cassette model (HICKS, STRATHERN and HERSKOWITZ )977b) proposed to explain MAT interconversions.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Exposed to iodine vapors, colonies of a homothallic strain of Schizosaccharomyces pombe were of two classes: P, with many black streaks, and d, with scarcely any. Contiguous P and d colonies, but not contiguous P colonies nor contiguous d colonies, gave the iodine junction reaction, a black line along the common boundary of two colonies. Neither class could be purified. On replating, a P colony gave rise to a P plate, which contained mostly P but also d colonies; a d colony gave rise to a d plate, which contained mostly d but also P colonies. The P/d colony ratio of a fresh isolate (if isolated as a P colony) was very high or (if isolated as a d conoly) very low. It fell, if initially high, or rose, if initially low, on subsequent replatings of the same isolate. Maintained for many generations, an isolate attained a fairly constant P/d colony ratio that was less than unity. Tetrad analysis showed 2:2 segregation of the classes. We conclude that a homothallic clone is a mixture of two types of cells: P, which gives rise to a P colony, and d, to a d colony. The two types are sexually complementary and interconvertible. The rate of intercoversion of P to d exceeds that of d to P by a factor of about 2.NRCC no.: 17334  相似文献   

11.
G. Thon  AJS. Klar 《Genetics》1993,134(4):1045-1054
Cells of homothallic strains of Schizosaccharomyces pombe efficiently switch between two mating types called P and M. The phenotypic switches are due to conversion of the expressed mating-type locus (mat1) by two closely linked silent loci, mat2-P and mat3-M, that contain unexpressed information for the P and M mating types, respectively. In this process, switching-competent cells switch to the opposite mating type in 72-90% of the cell divisions. Hence, mat2-P is a preferred donor of information to mat1 in M cells, whereas mat3-M is a preferred donor in P cells. We investigated the reason for the donor preference by constructing a strain in which the genetic contents of the donor loci were swapped. We found that switching to the opposite mating type was very inefficient in that strain. This shows that the location of the silent cassettes in the chromosome, rather than their content, is the deciding factor for recognition of the donor for each cell type. We propose a model in which switching is achieved by regulating accessibility of the donor loci, perhaps by changing the chromatin structure in the mating-type region, thus promoting an intrachromosomal folding of mat2 or mat3 onto mat1 in a cell type-specific fashion. We also present evidence for the involvement of the Swi6 and Swi6-mod trans-acting factors in the donor-choice mechanism. We suggest that these factors participate in forming the proposed folded structure.  相似文献   

12.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, sexual conjugation between haploid cells of opposite mating type results in the formation of a diploid zygote. When treated with fluorescently labeled concanavalin A, a zygote stains nonuniformly, with the greatest fluorescence occurring at the conjugation bridge between the two haploid parents. In the mating mixture, unconjugated haploid cells often elongate to pear-shaped forms ("shmoos") which likewise exhibit asymmetric staining with the most intense fluorescence at the growing end. Shmoo formation can be induced in cells of one mating type by the addition of a hormone secreted by cells of the opposite mating type; such shmoos also stain asymmetrically. In nearly all cases, the nonmating mutants that were examined stained uniformly after incubation with the appropriate hormone. Asymmetric staining is not observed with vegetative cells, even those that are budded. These results suggest that, before and during conjugation, localized cell surface changes occur in cells of both mating types; the surface alterations facilitate fusion and are apparently mediated by the hormones in a manner that is mating-type specific.  相似文献   

13.
Mascioli DW  Haber JE 《Genetics》1980,94(2):341-360
Homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are able to switch from one mating-type to the other as frequently as every cell division. We have identified a cis-dominant mutation of the MATa locus, designated MATa-inc, that can be converted to MATalpha at only about 5% of the normal efficiency. In homothallic MATa-inc/mata* diploids, the MATa-inc locus switched to MATalpha in only one of 30 cases, while the mata* locus switched to MATalpha in all 30 cases. The MATa-inc mutation can be "healed" by a series of switches, first to MATalpha and then to a normal allele of MATa. These data are consistent with the "cassette" model of Hicks, Strathern and Herskowitz (1977), in which mating conversions involve the transposition of wild-type copies of a or alpha information from silent genes elsewhere in the genome. The MATa-inc mutation appears to alter a DNA sequence necessary for the replacement of MATa by MATalpha. The MATa-inc mutation has no other effect on MATa functions. In beterothallic backgrounds, the mutation has no effect on the sensitivity to alpha-factor, synthesis of a-factor, expression of barrier phenotype or ability to mate or sporulate.--The MATa-inc allele does, however, exhibit one pleiotropic effect. About 1% of homothallic MATa-inc cells become completely unable to switch mating type because of mutations at HMa, the locus proposed to carry the silent copy of alpha information.--In addition, we have isolated a less efficient allele of the HO gene.  相似文献   

14.
H. A. Fujimura 《Genetics》1990,124(2):275-282
Mating pheromones, a- and alpha-factors, arrest the division of cells of opposite mating types, alpha and a cells, respectively. I have isolated a sterile mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that is defective in division arrest in response to alpha-factor but not defective in morphological changes and agglutinin induction. The mutation was designated dac2 for division arrest control by mating pheromones. The dac2 mutation was closely linked to gal1 and was different from the previously identified cell type nonspecific sterile mutations (ste4, ste5, ste7, ste11, ste12, ste18 and dac1). Although dac2 cells had no phenotype in the absence of pheromones, they showed morphological alterations and divided continuously in the presence of pheromones. As a result, dac2 cells had a mating defect. The dac2 mutation could suppress the lethality caused by the disruption of the GPA1 gene (previously shown to encode a protein with similarity to the alpha subunit of mammalian G proteins). In addition, dac2 cells formed prezygotes with wild-type cells of opposite mating types, although they could not undergo cell fusion. These results suggest that the DAC2 product may control the signal for G-protein-mediated cell-cycle arrest and indicate that the synchronization of haploid yeast cell cycles by mating pheromones is essential for cell fusion during conjugation.  相似文献   

15.
A J Klar 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(5):1407-1415
A key feature for development consists of producing sister cells that differ in their potential for cellular differentiation. Following two cell divisions, a haploid Schizosaccharomyces pombe cell produces one cell in four 'granddaughters' with a changed mating cell type, implying nonequivalence of sister cells in each of two consecutive cell divisions. The observed pattern of switching is analogous to the mammalian 'stem cell' lineage by which a cell produces one daughter like itself while the other daughter is advanced in its developmental program. It is tested here whether sisters differ because of unequal distribution of cytoplasmic and/or nuclear components to them or due to inheriting a specific parental DNA chain at the mating type locus. Only the DNA strand-segregation model predicts that those cells engineered to contain an inverted tandem duplication of the mating type locus should produce equivalent sisters. Consequently, two 'cousins' in four related granddaughter cells should switch. The results verified the prediction, thus establishing that all cells otherwise fully possess the potential to switch. Therefore, the program of cell type change in S.pombe cell lineages is determined by the pattern of DNA strand inheritance at the mating type locus. A specific DNA sequence present at the mating type locus is postulated to be the cause of developmental asymmetry between sister cells. A general model for cellular differentiation is proposed in which the act of DNA replication itself is hypothesized to produce developmentally nonequivalent sister genomes.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Takano I  Arima K 《Genetics》1979,91(2):245-254
The possible function of the α-inc allele (an α mating-type allele that is insensitive to the function of the homothallic gene system) was investigated by means of protoplast fusion. The fusion of protoplasts prepared from haploid strains of α-inc HO HMα HMa and α ho hmα HMa gave rise mainly to nonmating clones (58 of 64 isolates) and a few clones (six of 64 isolates) showing α mating type. Thirty of the 58 nonmating clones showed the diploid cell size and 28 clones had a larger cell size. Tetrad analysis of the nonmating clones with diploid cell size indicated that they were a/α-inc diploid; the normal α allele in α/α-inc cells was preferentially switched to an a allele. This observation further indicated that the HO/ho HMα/hmα HMa/HMa genotype is effective for the conversion of the α to a and that the inconvertibility of the α-inc allele is due to the insensitivity of the mating-type allele to the functional combination of the homothallic genes. It was suspected that fusion products larger than diploid cells might have been caused by multiple fusion of protoplasts.  相似文献   

18.
In several bacterial systems, mutant cell populations plated on growth-restricting medium give rise to revertant colonies that accumulate over several days. One model suggests that nongrowing parent cells mutagenize their own genome and thereby create beneficial mutations (stress-induced mutagenesis). By this model, the first-order induction of new mutations in a nongrowing parent cell population leads to the delayed accumulation of visible colonies. In an alternative model (selection only), selective conditions allow preexisting small-effect mutants to initiate clones that grow and give rise to faster-growing mutants. By the selection-only model, the delay in appearance of revertant colonies reflects (1) the time required for initial clones to reach a size sufficient to allow the second mutation plus (2) the time required for growth of the improved subclone. We previously characterized a system in which revertant colonies accumulate slowly and contain cells with two mutations, one formed before plating and one after. This left open the question of whether mutation rates increase under selection. Here we measure the unselected formation rate and the growth contribution of each mutant type. When these parameters are used in a graphic model of revertant colony development, they demonstrate that no increase in mutation rate is required to explain the number and delayed appearance of two of the revertant types.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Sexual activity in homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was investigated. We succeeded in culturing homothallic haploid cells without conjugation, by lowering the pH value of the culture medium. In spore cultures of a homothallic strain both a and pheromones were detected. Agglutination substances of a and mating types were detected in homothallic haploid cells from spore cultures in early logarithmic phase regardless of mating type information at the HML and HMR loci, but either a or agglutination substance was detected predominantly in homothallic haploid cells from spore culture in late logarithmic phase, depending on mating type information at the HML and HMR loci.A part of this work was supported by Grants-in-Aid from Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan, to N.Y.  相似文献   

20.
Hicks JB  Herskowitz I 《Genetics》1977,85(3):373-393
The two mating types of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be interconverted in both homothallic and heterothallic strains. Previous work indicates that all yeast cells contain the information to be both a and α and that the HO gene (in homothallic strains) promotes a change in mating type by causing a change at the mating type locus itself. In both heterothallic and homothallic strains, a defective α mating type locus can be converted to a functional a locus and subsequently to a functional α locus. In contrast, action of the HO gene does not restore mating ability to a strain defective in another gene for mating which is not at the mating type locus. These observations indicate that a yeast cell contains an additional copy (or copies) of α information, and lead to the "cassette" model for mating type interconversion. In this model, HMa and hmα loci are blocs of unexpressed α regulatory information, and HMα and hma loci are blocs of unexpressed a regulatory information. These blocs are silent because they lack an essential site for expression, and become active upon insertion of this information (or a copy of the information) into the mating type locus by action of the HO gene.  相似文献   

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