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1.
Y. H. Chiu  N. R. Morris 《Genetics》1995,141(2):453-464
Nuclear migration plays an important role in the growth and development of many organisms including the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. We have cloned three genes from A. nidulans, nudA, nudC, and nudF, in which mutations affect nuclear migration. The nudA gene encodes the heavy chain of cytoplasmic dynein. The nudC gene encodes a 22-kD protein. The nudF gene was identified as an extracopy suppressor of the temperature sensitive (ts(-)) nudC3 mutation. The nudC3 mutation substantially decreases the intracellular concentration of the nudF protein at restrictive temperature. This is restored toward the normal level by an extra copy of nudF. To identify other genes whose products interact directly or indirectly with the NUDC protein, we have isolated a set of extragenic suppressors of the nudC3 temperature-sensitive mutation. Genetic analysis of 16 such extragenic suppressors showed them to represent nine different genes, designated sncA-sncI (for suppressor of nudC). sncA-sncH were either dominant or semidominant in diploids homozygous for nudC3 and heterozygous for the snc mutations. All of the suppressors reversed the ts(-) phenotype of nudC3 by restoring the intracellular concentration of the NUDF protein.  相似文献   

2.
J H Doonan  N R Morris 《Cell》1989,57(6):987-996
In Aspergillus nidulans, the temperature-sensitive, recessive cell cycle mutation bimG11 causes an elevated mitotic index at restrictive temperature and an inability to complete the anaphase separation of daughter nuclei. We have shown that this mutation has an abnormally high content of nuclear phosphoproteins and that the wild-type gene encodes a type 1 protein phosphatase. We conclude that dephosphorylation of a key protein(s) is required to complete mitosis.  相似文献   

3.
D. A. Willins  X. Xiang    N. R. Morris 《Genetics》1995,141(4):1287-1298
Microtubules and cytoplasmic dynein, a microtubule-dependent motor, are required for nuclei to move along the hyphae of filamentous fungi. Nuclear migration in Aspergillus nidulans is blocked by heat-sensitive (hs(-)) mutations in the nudA gene, which encodes dynein heavy chain, and the nudF gene, which encodes a G protein β-subunit-like protein. Hs(-) mutations in the nudC and nudG genes also prevent nuclear migration. We have isolated extragenic suppressor mutations that reverse the hs(-) phenotypes caused by these mutations. Here we show that one nudF suppressor also suppresses hs(-) mutations in nudA, nudC, and nudG and deletions in nudA and nudF. This suppressor mutation is in the tubA alpha tubulin gene, and its characteristics suggest that it destabilizes microtubules. The mutation alters microtubule staining and confers sensitivity to cold and benomyl, two treatments that destabilize microtubules. Treatment with low concentrations of benomyl also suppresses the hs(-) nudA, nudC, nudF, and nudG mutations and the nudA and nudF deletions. Suppression of the hs(-) nudA mutation and the nudA deletion is especially interesting because these strains lack active dynein heavy chain. Together, these results suggest that microtubule destabilization allows nuclei to migrate even in the absence of cytoplasmic dynein motor function.  相似文献   

4.
Nuclear migration is required for normal development in both higher and lower eukaryotes. In fungi this process is mediated by cytoplasmic dynein. It is believed that this motor protein is anchored to the cell membrane and moves nuclei by capturing and pulling on spindle pole body microtubules. To date, four genes have been identified and shown to be required for this process in Aspergillus nidulans. The nudA and nudG genes, respectively, encode the heavy and light chains of cytoplasmic dynein, and the nudF and nudC gene products encode proteins of 49 and 22 kDa. The precise biochemical functions of the nudF and nudC genes have not yet been identified. In this report we further investigate NUDC protein function by deleting the nudC gene. Surprisingly, although deletion of nudA and nudF affect nuclear migration, deletion of nudC profoundly affected the morphology and composition of the cell wall. Spores of the strain deleted for nudC grew spherically and lysed. The thickness of the cell wall was increased in the deletion mutant and wall polymer composition was abnormal. This phenotype could be repressed by growth on osmotically buffered medium at low temperature. Similar, but less severe, effects were also noted in a strain depleted for NUDC by down-regulation. These results suggest a possible relationship between fungal cell wall biosynthesis and nuclear migration.  相似文献   

5.
Y. H. Chiu  N. R. Morris 《Genetics》1997,145(3):707-714
NudC encodes a protein of unknown biochemical function that is required for nuclear migration. In an attempt to define its function by identifying interacting proteins, a screen for extragenic suppressors of the temperature-sensitive nudC3 mutation was undertaken that identified nine snc genes. Here we demonstrate that nudC3 has a missense mutation at amino acid 146 that causes leucine to be replaced by proline and that sncB69 encodes a mutant tRNA(Leu) that corrects the mutation. The sncB69 mutation deletes a single nucleotide in the anticodon of a tRNA(Leu) that changes its normal (5')CAG(3') leucine anticodon to the proline anticodon (5')CGG(3'), which presumably allows incorporation of leucine at the mutant nudC3 proline codon 146 and thereby causes suppression of the nudC3 mutant phenotype.  相似文献   

6.
We isolated a mutant carrying a conditional mutation in the GLC7 gene, encoding the catalytic subunit of a type 1 protein phosphatase, by selection of suppressors that restored the growth defect of cdc24 mutants at high temperature and simultaneously conferred cold-sensitive growth. This cold sensitivity for growth is caused by a single mutation (glc7Y-170) at position 170 of the Glc7 protein, resulting in replacement of cysteine with tyrosine. Genetic analysis suggested that the glc7Y-170 allele is associated with a recessive negative phenotype, reducing the activity of Glc7 in the cell. The glc7Y-170 mutant missegregated chromosome III at the permissive temperature, arrested growth as large-budded cells at the restrictive temperature, exhibited a significant increase in the number of nuclei at or in the neck, and had a short spindle. Furthermore, the glc7Y-170 mutant exhibited a high level of CDC28-dependent protein kinase activity when incubated at the restrictive temperature. These findings suggest that the glc7Y-170 mutation is defective in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. Thus, type 1 protein phosphatase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is essential for the G2/M transition.  相似文献   

7.
A conditionally lethal mutation in the bimB gene of Aspergillus nidulans disrupts the normal regulatory patterns associated with mitotic events. This results in DNA replication in the absence of the completion of mitosis in the mutant at restrictive temperature. This defect yields large polyploid nuclei after several hours at restrictive temperature. The bimB gene has been cloned by genetic mapping and chromosome walking from the previously cloned amdS gene. The cloned DNA complements the temperature-sensitive recessive bimB3 mutation. Sequence analysis of overlapping complementary DNA clones for bimB predicts a polypeptide of 2,068 amino acids. The predicted polypeptide of 227,958 Da is shown to have a carboxyl-terminal region similar to those of the budding yeast ESP1 and fission yeast cut1+ genes. In contrast these genes exhibit no other regions of similarity to one another. The conserved domain in these three proteins and the similarity of the terminal mutant phenotypes for these genes are suggestive of a conserved function for this domain in each of the predicted polypeptides. We also present evidence for a second gene in the genome of A. nidulans which also has this conserved carboxyl-terminal region, suggesting that bimB, ESP1, and cut1+ may be members of a small gene family.  相似文献   

8.
A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DW137, isolated after treatment of a wild-type strain with ICR-170. The mutant was respiration-deficient and showed abnormal cell division when grown at 30 degrees C. In addition, the mutant was temperature-sensitive and underwent lysis when grown at 37 degrees C. Random spore analysis, induced reversion profiles, and complementation analysis indicated that the abnormal phenotypes were under the control of a single recessive mutation caused by a base-pair substitution in a nuclear gene. Macromolecular analysis of the mutant at permissive and restrictive temperatures showed that at restrictive temperatures the mutant cannot synthesize DNA. Surprisingly, at restrictive temperatures, protein synthesis in the mutant continued at a rate greater than that observed at permissive temperatures. Cell death and lysis of the mutant could be prevented by treatment of cultures with cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. The data suggest that the abnormally high rate of protein synthesis and the inability to synthesize DNA are jointly responsible for death of the cells, and most probably play and integrating role in the incipient cell lysis.  相似文献   

9.
Progression through anaphase requires high levels of type 1 protein phosphatase (PP1) activity in a variety of eukaryotes, including Aspergillus nidulans. A conditional lethal, temperature-sensitive mutant in one of the Aspergillus PP1 genes, bimG, prevents the normal completion of anaphase when cells are grown at restrictive temperature and this has been shown to be due to a reduction in type 1 phosphatase activity. We show that the bimG11 allele is recessive to the wild-type allele in heterozygous diploids, implying that the mutation is due to loss of function at restrictive temperature, but molecular disruption of the wild-type bimG gene shows that the gene is not essential and has no discernable phenotype under laboratory conditions. Sequence comparison of wild-type and mutant alleles reveals a single base pair difference between the two genes, within the 5' splicing site of the second intron. We demonstrate that the conditional lethal phenotype of bimG11 strains is due to impaired splicing of the mutant mRNA and that this leads to the production of a truncated protein comprising an intact N-subdomain and a modified C-terminus. Over-expression of this truncated form of PP1 in a wild-type haploid produces a lethal phenotype and reduced PP1 activity, supporting the idea that a toxic interfering protein is produced. PP1, therefore, may have at least two spatially separated sites, both of which are required for function. Temperature-sensitive splicing mutations may provide a novel means of engineering conditional versions of other proteins, particularly other phosphatases.  相似文献   

10.
Branching generates new axes of polar growth in filamentous fungi and is critical for development, reproduction, and pathogenicity. To investigate branching we screened an Aspergillus nidulans temperature-sensitive mutant collection for abnormal hyphal branch (ahb) mutants. We identified two mutants, ahbA1, which showed reduced branching relative to wild type at restrictive temperature, and ahbB1, which showed increased branching relative to wild type at restrictive temperature. Both mutants also showed abnormal conidiophore development at restrictive temperature. The ahbA1 hypobranching mutant showed defects in nuclear division and hydroxyurea resistance. Complementation and sequencing showed that ahbA1 is a previously identified allele of the cell cycle regulator nimX. The ahbB1 hyperbranching mutant had an increased number of nuclei, was osmotically remedial and Calcofluor resistant. The ahbB gene is predicted to encode a novel protein that has homologues exclusively in filamentous fungi. The C-terminal domain of the predicted AhbB protein showed homology with the heme-binding domain of a cytochrome P450 protein and sequencing of the ahbB1 mutant allele showed that the lesion lies just before this putative heme-binding domain. The ahbB1 mutant showed increased sensitivity to the ergosterol biosynthesis inhibitor imidazole. Our results suggest a link between nuclear division and branching and a possible role for membrane synthesis in branching.  相似文献   

11.
12.
A strain of Aspergillus nidulans carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the manA gene produces cell walls depleted of D-mannose and forms hyphal tip balloons at the restrictive temperature (B.P. Valentine and B.W. Bainbridge, J. Gen. Microbiol. 109:155-168, 1978). We have isolated and characterized the manA gene and physically located it between 3.5 and 5.5 kb centromere distal of the riboB locus on chromosome VIII. The manA gene contains four introns and encodes a 50.6-kDa protein which has significant sequence identity to type I phosphomannose isomerase proteins from other eukaryotes. We have constructed by integrative transformation a null mutation in the manA gene which can only be maintained in a heterokaryotic strain with wild-type manA+ nuclei. Thus, a manA null mutation is lethal in A. nidulans. The phenotype of the mutation was analyzed in germinating conidia. Such conidia are able to commence germination but swell abnormally, sometimes producing a misshapen germ tube, before growth ceases. The reason for the lethality is probably the lack of synthesis of mannose-containing cell wall polymers that must be required for normal cell wall development in growing hyphae.  相似文献   

13.
Wild-type Aspergillus nidulans conidia are uninucleate. The mutation bncA1 (binucleated conidia) was first described as a single mutation located on chromosome IV that caused formation of approximately 25% binucleate and 1% trinucleate conidia. In this study, we show that bncA1 conidia exit G1 arrest earlier than the wild type. Germlings have hyphal elements with abnormal morphology, elevated numbers of randomly distributed nuclei and an irregular septation pattern. Older hyphal elements undergo mitotic catastrophe, suggesting the nuclear division cycle of internal (nonterminal) elements is not arrested. The bncA1 mutation also causes aberrant morphogenesis of the asexual reproductive structure, the conidiophore. Metulae and phialides are elongated and have incorrect numbers of nuclei. Phialides also have internal septation that appears to delineate hyphal-like elements. Heterokaryon analysis using strains with contrasting auxotrophic markers showed that the bncA1 mutation resulted in a higher frequency of diploid and multinucleated prototrophic conidia than control heterokaryons. These results suggest that in bncA1 strains multiple nuclei can move from the conidiophore vesicle to the metulae and/or from the phialide to the conidium. The bncA1 mutant also showed hypersensitivity to the anti-microtubule drugs thiabendazole and nocodazole, which is consistent with the defects in cell cycle regulation and nuclear movement. We propose that bncA has an important role in correctly regulating both the cell division cycle and nuclear movement.  相似文献   

14.
The nudF and nudC genes of the fungus Aspergillus nidulans encode proteins that are members of two evolutionarily conserved families. In A. nidulans these proteins mediate nuclear migration along the hyphae. The human ortholog of nudF is Lis1, a gene essential for neuronal migration in the developing cerebral cortex. The mammalian ortholog of nudC encodes a protein that interacts with Lis1. We have identified orthologs of nudC and Lis1 from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Heterologous expression of the C. elegans nudC ortholog, nud-1, complements the A. nidulans nudC3 mutant, demonstrating evolutionary conservation of function. A C. elegans nud-1::GFP fusion produces sustained fluorescence in sensory neurons and embryos, and transient fluorescence in the gonad, gut, vulva, ventral cord, and hypodermal seam cells. Fusion of GFP to C. elegans lis-1 revealed expression in all major neuronal processes of the animal as well as the multinucleate spermathecal valves and adult seam cells. Phenotypic analysis of either nud-1 and lis-1 by RNA interference yielded similar phenotypes, including embryonic lethality, sterility, altered vulval morphology, and uncoordinated movement. Digital time-lapse video microscopy was used to determine that RNAi-treated embryos exhibited nuclear positioning defects in early embryonic cell division similar to those reported for dynein/dynactin depletion. These results demonstrate that the LIS-1/NUDC-like proteins of C. elegans represent a link between nuclear positioning, cell division, and neuronal function.  相似文献   

15.
To improve our understanding of the factors involved in the osmotic stability of yeast cells, a search for novel conditional Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell lysis mutants was performed. Ten temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant strains of S. cerevisiae were isolated that lyse at the restrictive temperature on hypotonic, but not on osmotically supported medium. The ten mutants fell into four complementation groups: ts1 to ts4. To clone the wild-type gene corresponding to the ts4 mutation, a strategy aimed at complementing the thermosensitive phenotype-using low-copy and high-copy DNA libraries--was followed, but only two extragenic suppressors were identified. Another approach, in which classic genetic methods were combined with the use of yeast artificial chromosomes and traditional cloning procedures, allowed the identification of the NUD1 gene--which codes for a component of the spindle-pole body-as the wild-type gene corresponding to the ts4 mutation. Cloning and sequencing of the defective allele from the chromosome of the mutant cells resulted in the identification of a point mutation that produces a single amino acid change in the protein: a Gly-to-Glu change at position 585 (the nud1-G585E allele). Further analysis revealed that cells carrying this allele show a thermosensitive growth defect. At the restrictive temperature, the cells arrest with large buds, elongated spindles, and duplicated nuclei. In addition, with longer incubation times they are unable to maintain cellular integrity and lyse. Our results have allowed the identification of the first single amino acid mutation in NUD1, and suggest a link between cell cycle progression and cellular integrity.  相似文献   

16.
A P Enos  N R Morris 《Cell》1990,60(6):1019-1027
In A. nidulans, the temperature-sensitive cell cycle mutation bimC4 causes an elevated mitotic index at restrictive temperature. Under restrictive conditions the mutation interferes with separation of the spindle pole bodies, causes abnormal spindle morphology, and prevents nuclear division. We have cloned and sequenced the wild-type bimC gene. The predicted protein product has homology to Drosophila kinesin heavy chain. We conclude that this kinesin-like protein has an important role in nuclear division in Aspergillus.  相似文献   

17.
Strains of Aspergillus nidulans carrying the conditional-lethal mutation sodVIC1 (stabilization of disomy) are defective in nuclear division and hyphal extension. The mutation affects both the establishment and maintenance of polar growth, since mutant spores do not germinate at restrictive temperature and preexisting hyphae stop growing upon upshift. The defect is reversible within the first 3-4 h at restrictive temperature but longer periods of incubation are lethal due to cell lysis and morphological abnormalities. There is no evidence for a specific cell cycle lesion, suggesting the existence of a feedback mechanism whereby hyphal extension is coordinated with nuclear partitioning. The sodVIC gene has been cloned from a chromosome VI-specific cosmid library and its product exhibits strong homology to the alpha-COP subunit of the coatomer complex involved in the secretory pathway in yeast and higher organisms. Molecular disruption of the gene is lethal, indicating that SodVIC is essential for growth in A. nidulans.  相似文献   

18.
Summary A temperature sensitive mutant of Escherichia coli was found to have two mutational alterations of its ribosomes: one of these was a streptomycin dependent mutation and the other was a suppressor alteration of S4, with a marked structural change. The altered form of S4 was studied in a strain that was constructed so that this alteration was the only one effecting the structure of the ribosome. Here, it was shown that the mutant form of S4 cause a temperature sensitive defect in the assembly of 30S subunits in vivo which is reflected in the inability of this mutant to properly process ribosomal RNA at the restrictive temperatures. An analysis of both transductants and revertants of this mutant show that the suppression of the streptomycin dependence phenotype, temperature sensitivity, and a defect in RNA processing all have their origin in a single mutational event effecting the structural gene for S4.  相似文献   

19.
Lin X  Momany C  Momany M 《Eukaryotic cell》2003,2(6):1169-1177
The temperature-sensitive swoH1 mutant of Aspergillus nidulans was previously identified in a screen for mutants with defects in polar growth. In the present work, we found that the swoH1 mutant swelled, lysed, and did not produce conidia during extended incubation at the restrictive temperature. When shifted from the permissive to the restrictive temperature, swoH1 showed the temperature-sensitive swelling phenotype only after 8 h at the higher temperature. The swoH gene was mapped to chromosome II and cloned by complementation of the temperature-sensitive phenotype. The sequence showed that swoH encodes a homologue of nucleoside diphosphate kinases (NDKs) from other organisms. Deletion experiments showed that the swoH gene is essential. A hemagglutinin-SwoHp fusion complemented the mutant phenotype, and the purified fusion protein possessed phosphate transferase activity in thin-layer chromatography assays. Sequencing of the mutant allele showed a predicted V83F change. Structural modeling suggested that the swoH1 mutation would lead to perturbation of the NDK active site. Crude cell extracts from the swoH1 mutant grown at the permissive temperature had ~20% of the NDK activity seen in the wild type and did not show any decrease in activity when assayed at higher temperatures. Though the data are not conclusive, the lack of temperature-sensitive NDK activity in the swoH1 mutant raises the intriguing possibility that the SwoH NDK is required for growth at elevated temperatures rather than for polarity maintenance.  相似文献   

20.
The Podospora anserina cro1 gene was identified as a gene required for sexual sporulation. Crosses homozygous for the cro1-1 mutation yield fruiting bodies which produce few asci due to the formation of giant plurinucleate cells instead of dikaryotic cells after fertilization. This defect does not impair karyogamy, but meioses of the resultant polyploid nuclei are most often abortive. Cytological studies suggest that the primary defect of the mutant is its inability to form septa between the daughter nuclei after each mitosis, a step specific for normal dikaryotic cell divisions. The cro1-1 mutant would thus be unable to leave the syncytial vegetative state while abiding by the meiotic programme. cro1-1 also shows defects in ascospore germination and growth rate. GFP-tagging of the CRO1 protein reveals that it is a cytosolic protein mainly expressed at the beginning of the dikaryotic stage and at the time of ascospore maturation. The CRO1 protein exhibits significant similarity to the SHE4 protein, which is required for asymmetric mating-type switching in budding yeast cells. Thus, a gene involved in asymmetric cell divisions in a unicellular organism plays a key role at the transition between the syncytial (vegetative) state and the cellular (sexual) state in a filamentous fungus.  相似文献   

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