首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A diffusible substance, α factor, is produced constitutively by haploid yeast cells of α mating type and this factor specifically inhibits the division of a mating type cells. Experiments are presented which demonstrate that α factor arrests a cells as unbudded, mononucleate cells prior to the initiation of DNA synthesis in the cell cycle. Studies with temperature-sensitive mutants defective in one of thirteen different cell cycle functions suggest that although arrested a cells continue to enlarge they do not perform functions required for the next cell cycle. The arrest is reversible and a partially synchronized round of DNA replication is observed upon removal of α factor from arrested cells. We propose that this factor is one element of a regulatory system that functions to assure the synchronization of a and α haploid cell cycles prior to conjugation.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of proteolytic enzymes on sexual agglutinability of haploid cells of the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae was examined. Sexual agglutinability of cells of botha and α types was lost on treatment with alkaline protease and two kinds of neutral proteases ofBacillus subtilis, pronase and α-chymotrypsin. Agglutinability of α type cells was lost after treatment with acid protease ofRhizopus chinensis and trypsin, but that ofa type cells was not. These results indicate that the sex-specific substance responsible for the sexual agglutination (agglutination factor) ina type cells differs from that in α type cells. Agglutination factors were solubilized from cell-wall fractions of both mating types by Glusulase treatment. These crude factors specifically inhibited the agglutinability of cells of the opposite mating type with little effect on the agglutinability of cells of the same mating type.  相似文献   

3.
The agglutination factors ofa and α mating types ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae were solubilized from isolated cell-wall fractions by treatment with snail enzyme (Glusulase) and shown to be adsorbed specifically by cells of the opposite mating type, resulting in the loss of agglutinability of these cells. The agglutination factors ofa and α types adsorbed by cells of the opposite mating type at pH 5.5 were eluted at pH 9.0. These factors were further purified on Sepharose 4B. From the elution pattern on Sepharose 4B, the molecular weights of the solubilized agglutination factors are estimated to be about one million. Thus purified agglutination factors contained carbohydrate and protein and were considerably resistant to heat treatment. Neutral protease ofBacillus subtilis inactivated botha and α type agglutination factors. Trypsin inactivated the α type agglutination factor only.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The alleles of the yeast mating type locus, MATα and MATa, determine the yeast cell types, a,α, and a/α. It has been proposed that the MATα2 product negatively regulates expression of unlinked a-specific genes, and that the MATα1 product positively regulates expression of unlinked α-specific genes. The behavior of mutants defective in MATα2, which are deficient in mating and in production of α-factor, can thus be attributed to antagonism between a-specific and α-specific functions expressed simultaneously in matα2? strains. If this view is correct, then elimination by mutation of the specific functions required to mate as α may allow matα2 mutants to mate as a. In order to test this possibility, we examined the interactions between matα2 mutations and various unlinked mutations that cause α cells but not a cells to be mating defective (α-specific STE mutations). Three α-specific mutations (ste3, ste13 and kex2) were found to be non-allelic. Furthermore, although matα2 mutants mate weakly as a, matα2, ste3 double mutants, but not matα2 ste13 or matα2 kex2 double mutants, mate efficiently as a. The ability of matα2 ste3 strains to mate as a supports the view that matα2 mutants express a-specific mating functions, and suggests that a mating functions are expressed constitutively in MATa cells. The mating behaviour of the matα2 ste3 double mutant is consistent with the proposal that STE3 is positively regulated by the MATα1 product.  相似文献   

6.
The replication of the 2 μm DNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been examined in cell division cycle (cdc) mutants. The 2 μm DNA does not replicate at the restrictive temperature in cells bearing the cdc28, cdc4, and cdc7 mutations which prevent passage of cells from the G1 phase into S phase. Plasmid replication also is prevented in a mating-type cells by α factor, a mating hormone which prevents cells from completing an event early in G1 phase. The 2 μm DNA ceases replication at 36 °C in a mutant harboring the cdc8 mutation, a defect in the elongation reactions of nuclear DNA replication. Plasmid replication continues at the restrictive temperature for approximately one generation in a cdc13 mutant defective in nuclear division. These results show that 2 μm DNA replication is controlled by the same genes that control the initiation and completion of nuclear DNA replication.  相似文献   

7.
Mating hormone, α-factor, which inhibits DNA synthesis and causes characteristic changes in cell morphology in a mating type cells, was also responsible for induction of sexual cell agglutinability of a mating type cells.  相似文献   

8.
Hicks JB  Herskowitz I 《Genetics》1976,83(2):245-258
The HO gene promotes interconversion between a and α mating types. As a consequence, homothallic diploid cells are formed by mating between siblings descended from a single α HO or a HO spore. In order to determine the frequency and pattern of the mating-type switch, we have used a simple technique by which the mating phenotype can be assayed without losing the cell to the mating process itself. Specifically, we have performed pedigree analysis on descendants of single homothallic spores, testing these cells for sensitivity to α-factor.

The switch from α to a and vice versa is detectable after a minimum of two cell divisions. 50% of the clones tested showed switching by the four-cell stage. Of the four cells descended from a single cell, only the oldest cell and its immediate daughter are observed to change mating type. This pattern suggests that one event in the switching process has occurred in the first cell division cycle. Restriction of the switched mating-type to two particular cells may reflect the action of the homothallism system followed by nonrandom segregation of DNA strands in mitosis.

The mating behavior of cells which have sustained a change in mating type due to the HO gene is indistinguishable from that of heterothallic strains.

  相似文献   

9.
The MATα allele of the yeast mating type locus confers the α mating phenotype and contains two complementation groups, MATα1 and MATα2. The α1–α2 hypothesis proposes that MATα1 is a positive regulator of α-specific genes and that MATα2 is a negative regulator of a-specific genes. According to this hypothesis, matα2 mutants, which are defective in mating and in production of extracellular α-factor, express both a-specific functions (because they lack MATα2 product) and α-specific functions (because they contain MATα1 product). Failure to produce extracellular α-factor results from antagonism between these functions; in particular, because α-factor (an α-specific function) is degraded by an a-specific function. If this view is correct, matα2 mutants should acquire the ability to produce α-factor if they also carry a defect in the gene(s) responsible for α-factor degradation. We have isolated a derivative of a matα2 mutant that produces α-factor and have characterized the suppressor mutation in this strain. (1) This strain carries a mutation (bar1-1) tightly linked to HIS6 (on chromosome IX) that allows matα2 mutants to produce α-factor. (2) It does not allow matα1 mutants to produce α-factor. (3) Haploids of the a mating type bearing the bar1-1 mutation still mate, but are unable to act as a barrier to the diffusion of α-factor. MATa bar1-1 cells display increased sensitivity to α-factor. (4) A mutation (sst1?2) that causes increased sensitivity to α-factor is allelic to bar1-1 and also allows α-factor synthesis by matα2 mutants. The ability of matα2 bar1 double mutants to produce extracellular α-factor indicates that matα2 mutants do produce α-factor but that it is degraded by the Barrier function. These results suggest that BAR1 is normally expressed only in a cells, and is negatively regulated in α cells by the MATα2 product.  相似文献   

10.
We have extended the genetic analysis of four mutants carrying defective MATα alleles in order to determine how the mating type locus controls yeast cell types: a, a, and aα. First, we have mapped the defect in the mutant VC73 to the mating type locus by diploid and tetraploid segregation analysis. Second, we have determined that the mutations in these strains define two complementation groups, MATα1 and MATα2. The MATα1 gene is proposed to be a positive regulator of α mating functions. The MATα2 gene product is proposed to have two roles, as a negative regulator of a-specific mating functions and as a regulator of aα cell functions (required for sporulation, for inhibition of mating and other processes). This view of MATα leads to the prediction that matα1?matα2? mutants should have the mating ability of an a cell and that matα1?matα2?/MATα strains should mate as α and be unable to sporulate. Such double mutants have been constructed and behave as predicted. We therefore propose that a-specific mating functions in MATa cells are constitutively expressed due to the absence of the MATα2 gene product and that α-specific mating functions are not expressed due to the absence of the MATα1 gene product.  相似文献   

11.
Yeast cells of mating type α excrete a sex factor which inhibits cell division and deoxyribonucleic acid replication but not ribonucleic acid or protein synthesis in cells of opposite mating type a.  相似文献   

12.
Pichia amethionina is a heterothallic yeast isolated from necrotic cactus tissue. Haploid cells of opposite mating type, designated a and α, agglutinate strongly when mixed. The agglutination factors of the two cell types have been solubilized from the cell walls by β-glucanase digestion and then partially purified by affinity adsorption to the opposite cell type and by gel filtration. From α-cells was obtained a large, heat-stable glycoprotein with the ability to agglutinate a-cells. This α-agglutinin was inactivated by mercaptoethanol, probably because the recognition sites are linked to the glycoprotein core by disulfide bonds. Digestion of a-cells with β-glucanase released a large heat-labile glycoprotein that did not agglutinate α-cells but did inhibit agglutination of a-cells by α-agglutinin. Subtilisin digestion of this a-factor released a carbohydrate-free protein of 27,000 daltons that retained the biological activity of the factor. These agglutination factors are sex- and species-specific and are not found on the surface of heterozygous diploid cells.  相似文献   

13.
The mating type locus (MAT) determines the three yeast cell types, a, α, and a/α. It has been proposed that alleles of this locus, MATa and MATα, encode regulators that control expression of unlinked genes necessary for mating and sporulation. Specifically, the α1 product of MATα is proposed to be a positive regulator of α-specific genes. To test this view, we have assayed RNA production from the α-specific STE3 gene in the three cell types and in mutants defective in MATα. The STE3 gene was cloned by screening a yeast genomic clone bank for plasmids that complement the mating defect of ste3 mutants. Using the cloned STE3 gene as a probe, we find that a cells produce STE3 RNA, whereas a and a/a cells do not. Furthermore, matα 1 mutants do not produce STE3 RNA, whereas matα 2 mutants do. These results show that the STE3 gene, required for mating only by α cells, is expressed only in α cells. They show also that production of RNA from the STE3 gene requires the α1 product of MATα. Thus α1 positively regulates at least one α-specific gene by increasing the level of that gene's RNA product.  相似文献   

14.
The process of the entry of FITC-conjugated mating factor into a-mating type cells of Saccharomycescerevisiae and its concentration into the nucleus were observed. But, when α-mating type cells or diploid cells of S.cerevisiae were incubated with the FITC-conjugated mating factor, its adsorption to the cell surface of the test organisms and its incorporation into the cell did not occur. The peptides formed by the cleavage of mating factor by α-mating type cells of S.cerevisiae were not adsorbed onto a-mating type cells.  相似文献   

15.
The transformation from the asexual proliferative stage of Tetrahymena to the sexual stage, during which cells of complementary mating types pair and nuclear fertilization occurs, provides an opportunity to study the relationship between the division cycle and differentiation. Conjugation is induced in cells starved for at least 2 hr by mixing complementary mating types. To determine the effect of starvation on the cell cycle, dividing cells were selected from a log growth culture and stepped down to non-nutrient conditions. The G1 stage is operationally divisible into two sectors, A and B. In the A stage, cells arrest in nutrient-free medium. In the B stage, they proceed through the division cycle. Arrested G1A cells may conjugate directly when challenged with similar cells of a complementary mating type. It is thereby demonstrated that Tetrahymena cells in G1A can be directed to divide (nutrient conditions) or can be directed to differentiate (non-nutrient conditions plus complementary mating type) without an intervening division cycle. This rules out a requirement for reprogramming via chromosomal replication or cell division and suggests that G1A is a stage during which the division/differentiation decision is made in direct response to ambient conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Mating type interconversion in homothallic Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been studied in diploids homozygous for the mating type locus produced by sporulation of a/a/a/α and a/a/α/α tetraploid strains. Mating type switches have been analyzed by techniques including direct observation of cells for changes in α-factor sensitivity. Another method of following mating type switching exploits the observation that a/α cells exhibit polar budding and a/a and α/α cells exhibit medial budding.—These studies indicate the following: (1) The allele conferring the homothallic life cycle (HO) is dominant to the allele conferring the heterothallic life cycle (ho). (2) The action of the HO gene is controlled by the mating type locus—active in a/a and α/α cells but not in a/α cells. (3) The HO (or HO-controlled) gene product can act independently on two mating type alleles located on separate chromosomes in the same nucleus. (4) A switch in mating type is observed in pairs of cells, each of which has the same change.  相似文献   

17.
Conjugation, a sexual stage in the life cycle of Tetrahymena, is marked by the pairing of two cells of opposite mating types. Pairing establishes cytoplasmic continuity between the two cells and initiates the complex of nuclear events involved in sexual exchange. After mixing cells of opposite mating types in nonnutrient medium, a 3-hr refractory period ensues before pairing begins.A wave of cell division occurs concurrently with the onset of pairing. However, although all cells pair, the population does not double. This indicates that some cells do not divide and yet are capable of pairing. Apparently division per se is not required for pairing but does occur in most of the cells.Autoradiographic analysis demonstrates that the cells that divide before pairing were at a stage in the cell cycle beyond the initiation of macronuclear replication at the time they were transferred to nonnutrient medium. Cells that did not divide were in G1 at the time of shift-down. Thus, neither replication nor division is required to be able to fuse. However, since fusion occurs only in G1 and most cells are not in G1 at the time of shift-down, a traverse of the cell cycle is required.Shift-down induces G1 arrest and preparations for the mating reaction. Mixing the cells induces a synchronous wave of division for cells beyond the G1S interface. Preparations for the mating reaction occur independently of but simultaneous with the preparations for cell division.  相似文献   

18.
α factor is a diffusible substance produced by S. cerevisiae cells of the α mating type which inhibits cell division (1) and the initiation of nuclear DNA synthesis (2) in cells of the a mating type. In this report, it is shown that mitochondrial DNA synthesis continues at a normal rate in a cells for at least 6 hours in the presence of α factor, resulting in a 5-fold increase in the amount of mitochondrial DNA per cell. The continued synthesis of mitochondrial DNA in the absence of nuclear DNA synthesis allows specific labeling of yeast mitochondrial DNA.  相似文献   

19.
After a eleven-steps purification, a peptidyl factor named α substance-Ia was isolated in pure form from a culture filtrate of α type cells of the heterothallic Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The substance induced the sexual agglutinability in a haploid cells belonging to the opposite mating type at concentrations from 0.4 to 0.8 ng/ml.  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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号