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1.
We have isolated two unlinked yeast genes complementing the cell division cycle mutant cdc25-1, one containing the wild type allele CDC25 and the other acting as an extragenic suppressor of the cdc25-1 lesion if present on a multicopy plasmid. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the suppressor gene has revealed an open reading frame that encodes a 45,000-dalton protein belonging to the protein kinase family. The cdc25-suppressing protein kinase (PK-25) shows 48% sequence similarity to the catalytic subunit (CA) of mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase and 27-31% similarity to cyclic nucleotide-independent enzymes, including the yeast CDC28 gene product. The PK-25 gene was targeted by integrative transformation into a chromosomal region unlinked to the CYR2 site, the structural gene of CA. The cdc25-suppressing protein kinase is also functionally different from CA, since cyr2 strains deficient in the free catalytic subunit remain temperature sensitive if transformed with a multicopy plasmid containing the PK-25 gene. Furthermore, a deficiency of the cAMP-binding regulatory subunit (RA) caused by the bcy1 mutation fails to suppress the cdc25 mutation, indicating that PK-25 does not interact with the cAMP receptor protein. Our data suggest that the cdc25 suppressor gene encodes a cAMP-independent protein kinase involved in the control of the cell cycle start.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Phosphoprotein patterns in two mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, cdc25-20(ts) and cdc25-20(ts) bcy1, were analysed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Comparison with the phosphoprotein patterns of the mutants cyr1-2(ts) and bcy1, analysed in a previous study, demonstrated not only that the CDC25 gene product is a positive element in the regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity, as suggested by recent studies, but that it is also a negative element in the phosphorylation of a 31 kDa protein (p31c and p31d), a protein whose phosphorylation is correlated with cell cycle arrest, and dephosphorylation with cell cycle initiation, respectively. Moreover, the phosphorylation phenotype of p31c and p31d suggests that the activity of the CDC25 protein is subject to feedback regulation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and that the CDC25 protein is a key element in an ammonium (NH+4) signal-response system.  相似文献   

4.
K Matsumoto  I Uno  T Ishikawa 《Cell》1983,32(2):417-423
Control of the initiation of meiosis was examined in diploids of yeast homozygous for two temperature-sensitive mutations, cyr1 and CYR3, which are defective in adenylate cyclase and cAMP-dependent protein kinase, respectively. The cyr1 and CYR3 mutations permitted the initiation of meiosis, but resulted in the frequent production of two-spored asci at the restrictive temperature. Unlike the wild-type diploid cells, the cyr1 and CYR3 homozygous diploid cells were capable of initiating meiosis even in nutrient growth media. This unique feature of the cyr1 and CYR3 mutants suggests that these mutations relate to the choice between mitotic and meiotic processes. In diploids homozygous for the bcy1 mutation that results in deficiency of the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and production of a high level of the catalytic subunit of this enzyme, no premeiotic DNA replication and commitment to intragenic recombination occurred, and no spores were formed. We conclude that the initiation of meiosis may be dependent upon the repression of cAMP production and the inactivation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

5.
The cyr2 mutant of yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, required cAMP for growth at 35 degrees C. The cyr2 mutation was suppressed by the bcy1 mutation which resulted in deficiency of the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The DEAE-Sephacel elution profile of cyr2 cAMP-dependent protein kinase was markedly different from that observed for the wild-type enzyme. With histone as substrate, the cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity of cyr2 cells showed 100-fold greater Ka value for activation by cAMP at 35 degrees C than that of the wild-type cells, while the Kd value for cAMP of the mutant enzyme was not altered. The electrophoretic character, molecular weight, and pI value of the regulatory subunit of the mutant enzyme were the same as those of the wild-type enzyme. When histone, trehalase, and glutamate dehydrogenase were used as substrate, the free catalytic subunit of the mutant enzyme showed a markedly decreased affinity for ATP and was more thermolabile compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. The results indicated that the cyr2 phenotype was produced by a structural mutation in the cyr2 gene coding for the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in yeast.  相似文献   

6.
Examination of the proportion of unbudded cells, terminal nuclear phenotype and DNA content of nuclei indicated that cyr1 mutants of yeast defective in adenylate cyclase activity were arrested at the G1 phase of the cell cycle. The step of G1 arrest due to the cyr1 mutation preceded the step sensitive to the mating pheromone. The temperature-sensitive cyr1 cells did not continue growth, nor retain the capacity to conjugate at a restrictive temperature. The phenotypes of the cyr1 mutant mimicked those of nutritionally limited cells. The G1 arrest caused by the cyr1 mutation was overcome by the presence of a suppressor mutation, bcy1, that resulted in deficiency of a regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and production of high level of cAMP-independent protein kinase. The bcy1 mutation suppressed G1 arrest caused by nutritional limitation, and continued bud emergence for multiple cycles without further nuclear division. The data suggest that cAMP works as a positive effector at the start of a yeast cell cycle via activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

7.
Glucose-induced inactivation of the gluconeogenetic enzymes fructose-1,6-biphosphatase, cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was tested in yeast mutants defective in adenylate cyclase (cyr1 mutation) and in the cAMP-binding subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (bcy 1 mutation). In the mutant AM7-11D (cyr1 mutation), glucose-induced cAMP overshoot was absent, and no significant inactivation of the gluconeogenetic enzymes was detected, thus supporting the role of cAMP in the process. Moreover, in the mutant AM9-8B (bcy1 mutation), no cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity was evidenced, and, in addition, a normal inactivation pattern was observed, thus indicating that other mechanisms evoked by glucose might be required in the process. In the double mutant AM7-11DR-4 (cyr1 bcy1 mutations), no inactivating effect was triggered by the sugar: this suggests that cAMP exerts some additional effect on the process, besides the activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Furthermore, in AM7-11D, extracellular cAMP triggered about 50% of inactivation of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase; this effect was largely reversed in acetate medium plus cycloheximide even after 150 min of incubation. However, an extensive and essentially irreversible inactivation was evidenced in the presence of glucose plus cAMP, whereas glucose alone was only slightly effective. Therefore, the reversible effect of cAMP, which probably corresponds to enzyme phosphorylation, seems to be required for the irreversible, probably proteolytic, glucose-stimulated inactivation of this enzyme. Cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in AM7-11D were also inactivated by cAMP, and much more by glucose plus cAMP, whereas glucose was practically ineffective. However, reversibility of the effect was not detected, and, in addition, no phosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase could be evidenced. Therefore, the sugar quite probably stimulates proteolysis of these enzymes, but the mechanism of cAMP in their degradation has still to be defined.  相似文献   

8.
R Booher  D Beach 《Cell》1989,57(6):1009-1016
Fission yeast cdc25+ and wee1+ interact genetically with cdc2+ in the regulation of cell division, respectively as a mitotic activator and inhibitor. cdc25+ is normally essential for mitosis, but this requirement is alleviated in a loss-of-function wee1 mutant background. A plasmid-borne sequence, other than wee1+, that causes a cdc25ts wee1- double mutant to revert to a temperature-sensitive cdc phenotype has been isolated. The gene carried by this plasmid is called bws1+ (for bypass of wee suppression). bws1+ also bypasses the ability of alleles of cdc2 that confer a wee phenotype (cdc2w) to suppress loss-of-function cdc25 mutants. The nucleotide sequence of bws1+ shows that the predicted protein shares 81% amino acid identity with the catalytic subunit of mammalian type 1 protein phosphatase. Thus a genetic screen that might have yielded a protein kinase (wee1+) uncovered a phosphatase that also appears to be involved in the pathway of mitotic control.  相似文献   

9.
The CYR3 mutant of yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, partially accumulated unbudded cells and required cAMP for the best growth at 35 degrees C. The CYR3 mutation was partially dominant over the wild type counterpart and suppressed by the bcy1 mutation which is responsible for the deficiency of the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The molecular weights of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and its catalytic and regulatory subunits were 160,000, 30,000, and 50,000, respectively. No significant differences in the molecular weights of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and the subunits were found between the wild type and CYR3 mutant strains. However, the cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity of CYR3 cells showed significantly higher Ka values for activation by cAMP at 35 degrees C than those of wild type and a clear difference in the electrophoretic mobility of the regulatory subunit was found between the wild type and CYR3 enzymes. The CYR3 mutation was suppressed by the IAC mutation which caused the production of a significantly high level of cAMP. The results indicate that the CYR3 phenotype was produced by a structural mutation in the CYR3 gene coding for the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in yeast.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated a snf1/ccr1 mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae which loses viability upon starvation and fails to accumulate glycogen in response to abrupt depletion of phosphate or glucose. A snf1 null mutant is sensitive to heat stress and starvation and fails to accumulate glycogen during growth in rich medium. The phenotypes of the snf1 mutants are those commonly associated with an overactivation of the adenylate cyclase pathway. Mutations in adenylate cyclase or RAS2 which decrease the level of cAMP in the cell moderate the snf1 phenotype. In contrast, a mutation in RAS2 (RAS2val19) which increases the level of cAMP or a mutation in the regulatory subunit (BCY1) of cAMP-dependent protein kinase which results in unregulated cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity accentuates the snf1 phenotype. However, the action of SNF1 in the stress response appears at least partly independent of cAMP-dependent protein kinase because a snf1 phenotype is observed in a strain that lacks all three of the genes that encode the catalytic subunits of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. SNF1 therefore acts at least in part through a cAMP-independent pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Meiotic development (sporulation) in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is induced by nutritional deprivation. Smk1 is a meiosis-specific MAP kinase homolog that controls spore morphogenesis after the meiotic divisions have taken place. In this study, recessive mutants that suppress the sporulation defect of a smk1-2 temperature-sensitive hypomorph were isolated. The suppressors are partial function alleles of CDC25 and CYR1, which encode the Ras GDP/GTP exchange factor and adenyl cyclase, respectively, and MDS3, which encodes a kelch-domain protein previously implicated in Ras/cAMP signaling. Deletion of PMD1, which encodes a Mds3 paralog, also suppressed the smk1-2 phenotype, and a mds3-Δ pmd1-Δ double mutant was a more potent suppressor than either single mutant. The mds3-Δ, pmd1-Δ, and mds3-Δ pmd1-Δ mutants also exhibited mitotic Ras/cAMP phenotypes in the same rank order. The effect of Ras/cAMP pathway mutations on the smk1-2 phenotype required the presence of low levels of glucose. Ime2 is a meiosis-specific CDK-like kinase that is inhibited by low levels of glucose via its carboxy-terminal regulatory domain. IME2-ΔC241, which removes the carboxy-terminal domain of Ime2, exacerbated the smk1-2 spore formation phenotype and prevented cyr1 mutations from suppressing smk1-2. Inhibition of Ime2 in meiotic cells shortly after Smk1 is expressed revealed that Ime2 promotes phosphorylation of Smk1's activation loop. These findings demonstrate that nutrients can negatively regulate Smk1 through the Ras/cAMP pathway and that Ime2 is a key activator of Smk1 signaling.  相似文献   

12.
A mutation in the gene IRA1 (formerly called PPD1) was originally characterized as a deficiency of a phosphoprotein phosphatase. The IRA1 gene has been cloned and sequenced. A large open reading frame (8,817 base pairs) which can encode a protein of 2,938 amino acids was found. Northern (RNA) blot analysis detected a message of about 10 kilobases, and nuclease S1 protection demonstrated mRNA start points at 97 and 98 base pairs upstream from the putative initiator ATG codon. Disruption of the IRA1 gene resulted in sensitivity to nitrogen starvation and heat shock. Diploids homozygous for the disrupted IRA1 gene were deficient in sporulation. Disruption of the IRA1 gene suppressed the lethality of the cdc25 mutation but did not suppress the lethality of either the ras1 ras2 or the cyr1 mutations. Deficiency of the phosphoprotein phosphatase was not reproducible in the disruption mutant of the IRA1 gene. Moreover, the ira1 mutant showed an increased level of cyclic AMP. Our results suggest that the IRA1 protein inhibits the function of the RAS proteins in a fashion antagonistic to the function of the CDC25 protein in the RAS-cyclic AMP pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

13.
Mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that are derepressed for meiosis and spore formation have been isolated and characterized genetically. All are the result of single, recessive nuclear mutations that fall into four linkage groups. Three of these groups are represented by spd1, spd3 and spd4 mutations, which in homozygous diploids confer poor growth and extensive sporulation on a range of non-fermentable media. Haploids carrying any of these mutations are arrested under these conditions in the G1 phase of the cell division cycle as large unbudded cells. The alleles of the spd2 mutation complemented all other mutations but were very closely linked to the spd1 locus. The fourth linkage group was represented by a mutation conferring temperature-sensitive growth and derepressed sporulation on homozygous diploids grown between 25 degrees C and 30 degrees C on media containing galactose or glycerol, but not glucose, as energy source. Above 30 degrees C this mutant lysed on all media. The mutation it carried failed to complement available cdc25 mutations. These data bring to five the number of loci at which mutation can lead to derepressed sporulation (spd1, spd3, spd4, cdc25 and cdc35). The spd1 locus has been mapped 13.9 cM to the left of the centromere on chromosome XV, adjacent to the SUP3 gene. Diploid strains homozygous for spd mutations are genetically unstable, giving rise to asporogenous mutants at high frequency, usually as the result of a second mutation unlinked to the spd mutation. Diploids homozygous for these mutations, and for spd mutations, show an altered regulation of the formulation of at least three polypeptides normally subject to carbon source repression.  相似文献   

14.
H. Mitsuzawa  I. Uno  T. Oshima    T. Ishikawa 《Genetics》1989,123(4):739-748
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains two ras homologues, RAS1 and RAS2, whose products have been shown to modulate the activity of adenylate cyclase encoded by the CYR1 gene. To isolate temperature-sensitive mutations in the RAS2 gene, we constructed a plasmid carrying a RAS2 gene whose expression is under the control of the galactose-inducible GAL1 promoter. A ras1 strain transformed with this plasmid was subjected to ethyl methanesulfonate mutagenesis and nystatin enrichment. Screening of approximately 13,000 mutagenized colonies for galactose-dependent growth at a high temperature (37 degrees) yielded six temperature-sensitive ras2 (ras2ts) mutations and one temperature-sensitive cyr1 (cyr1ts) mutation that can be suppressed by overexpression or increased dosage of RAS2. Some ras2ts mutations were shown to be suppressed by an extra copy of CYR1. Therefore increased dosage of either RAS2 or CYR1 can suppress the temperature sensitivity caused by a mutation in the other. ras1 ras2ts and ras1 cyr1ts mutants arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle at the restrictive temperature, and showed pleiotropic phenotypes to varying degrees even at a temperature permissive for growth (25 degrees), including slow growth, sporulation on rich media, increased accumulation of glycogen, impaired growth on nonfermentable carbon sources, heat-shock resistance, impaired growth on low concentrations of glucose, and lithium sensitivity. Of these, impaired growth on low concentrations of glucose and sensitivity to lithium are new phenotypes, which have not been reported for mutants defective in the cAMP pathway.  相似文献   

15.
In the preceding paper, we have identified a protein of Mr = 118,000 which is induced by stress conditions that lead to cessation of DNA synthesis and cell division (Verma, R., Iida, H., and Pardee, A.B. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 8569-8575). In the current study, we have investigated the possible role this protein may play in cellular proliferation by studying p118 expression in mutants of the cAMP metabolic pathway. The cyr 1-2 mutant gene encodes a thermolabile adenylate cyclase whose activity is only 7% of wild type even at permissive temperatures (23 degrees C). We have found that at 23 degrees C, the G1 period was 5-fold longer in cyr 1-2 than in CYR1+ cells and that p118 was constitutively expressed in these slow cycling mutants. Addition of 8-bromo-cAMP to cyr 1-2 mutants restored growth at both the restrictive and permissive temperatures and resulted in a shut-off in the synthesis of p118. The effect of the analog on p118 expression was rapid, preceding the increase in cell number and percentage-budded cells. In contrast to wild type cells, p118 synthesis was not induced by sulfur starvation in RAS2val19 mutants possessing high levels of adenylate cyclase activity and bcy1 mutants defective in the regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. A large body of evidence exists supporting a role of cAMP in positive control of cell proliferation. It is therefore possible that conditions which decrease cAMP arrest growth through a chain of events that include p118 induction.  相似文献   

16.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, cAMP-dependent phosphorylation plays an essential role at the start of the cell cycle. It has also recently been demonstrated that the breakdown of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate to inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol is a requisite process for cell proliferation (Uno, I., Fukami, K., Kato, H., Takenawa, T., and Ishikawa, T. (1988) Nature 333, 188-190). To clarify the relationship between the cAMP- and inositol phospholipid-mediated signal transduction systems, alterations in the inositol phospholipid metabolism of cAMP mutants were examined. The incorporation of [32P]Pi into phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PIP) and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) was markedly reduced in ras2, which produces low levels of cAMP, and increased in bcy1, which produces cAMP-independent protein kinase. The incorporation of [32P]Pi into ATP and phosphatidylinositol (PI) was almost the same in wild type, ras1, ras2, and bcy1 yeast strains. The addition of exogenous cAMP to cyr1-2 caused a tremendous increase in [32P]Pi incorporation into PIP and PIP2 without any effect on incorporation into ATP and PI, suggesting that cAMP plays an important role in polyphosphoinositide synthesis. We therefore examined the activities of PI and PIP kinases, the enzymes that catalyze the sequential steps from PI to PIP2 via PIP. The activities of both kinases were found to be very low in the membranes of cry1-2 and ras2 but very high in the membranes of bcy1 and ras1 ras2 bcy1 strain cells. The addition of cAMP to cyr1-2 cells caused the activation of PI and PIP kinases. Furthermore, the treatment of membranes with cAMP or dibutyryl cAMP caused the activation of PI kinase in wild type, ras1, cry1-2, and ras2 strains, but not in bcy1 strain cells. The effect was most prominent in membranes from cyr1-2 and ras2 cells. These results show that cAMP-dependent phosphorylation enhances polyphosphoinositide synthesis through activation of PI and PIP kinase, an effect which may lead to the enhanced production of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol.  相似文献   

17.
The glycoprotein gp115 (Mr = 115,000, pI 4.8-5) is localized in the plasma membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells and maximally expressed during G1 phase. To gain insight on the mechanism regulating its synthesis, we have examined various conditions of cell proliferation arrest. We used pulse-labeling experiments with [35S]methionine and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis, which allow the detection of the well characterized 100-kDa precursor of gp115 (p100). In the cAMP-requiring mutant cyr1, p100 synthesis is active during exponential growth, shut off by cAMP removal, and induced when growth is restored by cAMP readdition. The inhibition of p100 synthesis also occurs in TS1 mutant cells (ras1ras2-ts1) shifted from 24 to 37 degrees C. During nitrogen starvation of rca1 cells, a mutant permeable to cAMP, p100 synthesis is also inhibited. cAMP complements the effect of ammonium deprivation, promoting p100 synthesis, even when added to cells which have already entered G0. Experiments with the bcy1 and cyr1bcy1 mutants have indicated the involvement of the cAMP-dependent protein kinases in the control of p100 synthesis. Moreover, the synthesis of p100 was unaffected in A364A cells, terminally arrested at START B by alpha-factor. These results indicate that the switch operating on p100 synthesis is localized in early G1 (START A) and is one of the multiple events controlled by the cAMP pathway.  相似文献   

18.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae CDC42 gene product, a member of the ras superfamily of low-molecular-weight GTP-binding proteins, is involved in the control of cell polarity. We have analyzed the effects of three CDC42 mutations (Gly to Val-12, Gln to Leu-61, and Asp to Ala-118) in the putative GTP-binding and hydrolysis domains and one mutation (Cys to Ser-188) in the putative isoprenylation site. The first three mutations resulted in either a dominant-lethal or dose-dependent dominant-lethal phenotype when present on plasmids in haploid cdc42-1ts or wild-type strains. Both wild-type and cdc42-1ts cells carrying plasmids (pGAL) with either the CDC42Val-12 or CDC42Leu-61 alleles under the control of a GAL promoter were arrested with a novel phenotype of large cells with elongated or multiple buds. Cells carrying pGAL-CDC42Ala-118 were arrested as large, round, unbudded cells reminiscent of cdc42-1ts arrested cells. The different phenotype of the CDC42Ala-118 mutant versus the CDC42Val-12 and CDC42Leu-61 mutants was unexpected since the phenotypes of all three analogous ras mutants were similar to each other. This suggests that aspects of the biochemical properties of the Cdc42 protein differ from those of the Ras protein. The cdc42Ser-188 mutant gene was incapable of complementing the cdc42-1ts mutation and was recessive to both wild-type and cdc42-1ts. In double-mutant alleles, the cdc42Ser-188 mutation was capable of suppressing the dominant lethality associated with the three putative GTP-binding and hydrolysis mutations, suggesting that isoprenylation is necessary for the activity of the wild-type and mutant proteins.  相似文献   

19.
In order to characterize the interaction between the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc25 protein and Harvey-ras (p21H-ras), we have constructed a yeast strain disrupted at the RAS1 and RAS2 loci, expressing both p21H-ras and the catalytic domain of the bovine GTPase activating protein (GAP) and containing the cdc25-2 mutation. Such a strain exhibits a temperature-sensitive phenotype. The shift to the nonpermissive temperature is accompanied by the loss of guanyl nucleotide-dependent activity of adenylylcyclase in vitro. The temperature-sensitive phenotype can be rescued by CDC25 itself, as well as by a plasmid containing a truncated SDC25 gene. In addition, wild type CDC25 significantly improves the guanyl nucleotide response observed in the background of the cdc25ts allele at the permissive temperature in a dosage-dependent manner and restores the guanyl nucleotide response at the restrictive temperature. Both CDC25 and a truncated SDC25 also restored p21H-ras-dependent guanyl nucleotide response in a strain isogenic to the one described above but containing a disrupted CDC25 locus instead of the temperature-sensitive allele. These results suggest that the S. cerevisiae Cdc25 protein interacts with p21H-ras expressed in yeast by promoting GDP-GTP exchange. It follows that the yeast system can be used for characterizing the interaction between guanyl nucleotide exchangers of Ras proteins and mammalian p21H-ras.  相似文献   

20.
Sporulation in diploid cells homozygous for the cyr1-2 mutation of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was examined. This mutation causes a defect in adenylate cyclase and temperature-sensitive arrest in the G1 phase of the mitotic cell cycle. The cyr1-2/cyr1-2 diploid cells were able to initiate meiotic divisions, but produced predominantly two-spored asci at the restrictive temperature. Temperature-sensitive period for production of two-spored asci was approximately 12 h after the transfer of cells to the sporulation medium. The levels of cAMP increased during this period in the wild type and cyr1-2/cyr1-2 diploid cells incubated at the permissive temperature, but remained at an extremely low level in the cyr1-2/cyr1-2 diploid cells incubated at the restrictive temperature. Dyad analysis of the cyr1-2 strain indicated that meiotic products were randomly included into ascospores. Fluorescent microscopy of the cyr1-2/cyr1-2 diploid cells incubated at the restrictive temperature revealed that individual haploid nuclei were enclosed in each of the two spores after meiosis. About half of the cyr1-2/cyr1-2 diploid cells entered normal meiosis 1 producing two normal spindle pole bodies with inner and outer plaques, and the other half entered abnormal meiosis 1 producing one normal spindle pole body and one defective spindle pole body without out plaque. At meiosis II, some cells contained a pair of normal spindle pole bodies and other cells contained pairs of normal and abnormal spindle pole bodies.  相似文献   

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