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1.
Wild-type yeast mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is inherited biparentally, whereas mtDNA of hypersuppressive petite mutants is inherited uniparentally in crosses to strains with wild-type mtDNA. Genomes of hypersuppressive petites contain a conserved ori sequence that includes a promoter, but it is unclear whether the ori confers a segregation or replication advantage. Fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis of wild-type and petite mtDNAs in crosses reveals no preferential segregation of hypersuppressive petite mtDNA to first zygotic buds. We identify single-stranded DNA circles and RNA-primed DNA replication intermediates in hypersuppressive petite mtDNA that are absent from non-hypersuppressive petites. Mutating the promoter blocks hypersuppressiveness in crosses to wild-type strains and eliminates the distinctive replication intermediates. We propose that promoter-dependent RNA-primed replication accounts for the uniparental inheritance of hypersuppressive petite mtDNA.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication in petite mutants ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae is generally less sensitive to inhibition by ethidium bromide than in grande (respiratory competent) cells. In every petite that we have examined, which retain a range of different grande mtDNA sequences, this general phenomenon has been demonstrated by measurements of the loss of mtDNA from cultures grown in the presence of the drug. The resistance is also demonstrable by direct analysis of drug inhibition of mtDNA replication in isolated mitochondria. Furthermore, the resistance to ethidium bromide is accompanied, in every case tested, by cross-resistance to berenil and euflavine, although variations in the levels of resistance are observed.In one petite the level of in vivo resistance to the three drugs was very similar (4-fold over the grande parent) whilst another petite was mildly resistant to ethidium bromide and berenil (each 1.6-fold over the parent) and strongly resistant (nearly 8-fold) to inhibition of mtDNA replication by euflavine. The level of resistance to ethidium bromide in several other petite clones tested was found to vary markedly. Using genetic techniques it is possible to identify those petites which display an enhanced resistance to ethidium bromide inhibition of mtDNA replication.It is considered that the general resistance of petites arises because a product of mitochondrial protein synthesis is normally involved in facilitating the inhibitory action of these drugs on mtDNA synthesis in grande cells. The various levels of resistance in petites may be modulated by the particular mtDNA sequences retained in each petite.  相似文献   

3.
A W Linnane  P Nagley 《Plasmid》1978,1(3):324-345
The attainment of the map of functions coded in the yeast mitochondrial genome represents the end of an era of development in mitochondrial genetics. Following the earliest genetic studies, where first the respiration-deficient petite mutants, then subsequently the other types of mitochondrial mutants, were characterized, it was realized that a genetic approach to the questions of mitochondrial biogenesis and the genetic function of mtDNA would yield much useful information. A period of intensive investigation into the behavior of mitochondrial genes in genetic crosses followed, and it was concluded that the purely genetic techniques of transmissional and recombinational analysis could not yield a map of the genetic loci, although basic rules for mitochondrial genetic manipulation were established. The concurrent studies of the nature of the deletions in petite mtDNA led to the recognition that an analysis of the behavior of genetic loci in petite mutants would provide the method for genetically mapping the positions of loci in mtDNA where conventional genetic crosses between grande strains had failed. This thesis was first confirmed by our studies of the frequencies of coretention and loss of individual loci in large populations of petite isolates, which produced the first circular genetic map of drug resistance loci on mtDNA. Subsequent to this genetic mapping phase, we established a general procedure for determining the physical map position of any mitochondrial genetic locus or mtDNA sequence by introducing the use of a molecular library of petite mutants carrying physically and genetically defined segments of mtDNA. These petites can be tested for the retention or loss of genetic loci or particular nucleotide sequences. This general solution to the mapping problem and the physical map of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial genome obtained, which has been confirmed by studies using restriction enzymes, has provided the field with a molecular point of reference for the many current genetic and biochemical investigations into the structure and function of mtDNA in yeast.  相似文献   

4.
Instability of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) is a general problem from yeasts to humans. However, its genetic control is not well documented except in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. From the discovery, 50 years ago, of the petite mutants by Ephrussi and his coworkers, it has been shown that more than 100 nuclear genes directly or indirectly influence the fate of the rho(+) mtDNA. It is not surprising that mutations in genes involved in mtDNA metabolism (replication, repair, and recombination) can cause a complete loss of mtDNA (rho(0) petites) and/or lead to truncated forms (rho(-)) of this genome. However, most loss-of-function mutations which increase yeast mtDNA instability act indirectly: they lie in genes controlling functions as diverse as mitochondrial translation, ATP synthase, iron homeostasis, fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial morphology, and so on. In a few cases it has been shown that gene overexpression increases the levels of petite mutants. Mutations in other genes are lethal in the absence of a functional mtDNA and thus convert this petite-positive yeast into a petite-negative form: petite cells cannot be recovered in these genetic contexts. Most of the data are explained if one assumes that the maintenance of the rho(+) genome depends on a centromere-like structure dispensable for the maintenance of rho(-) mtDNA and/or the function of mitochondrially encoded ATP synthase subunits, especially ATP6. In fact, the real challenge for the next 50 years will be to assemble the pieces of this puzzle by using yeast and to use complementary models, especially in strict aerobes.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The effects of the acridines euflavine and proflavine on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication and mutation inSaccharomyces cerevisiae have been compared. In contrast to previous results we found that under our conditions proflavine can indeed induce high levels (>80%) of petite mutants, although six times less efficiently than euflavine. The parameters measured for mutagenesis of the mitochondrial genome and inhibition of mtDNA replication in whole cells suggest that the modes of action of euflavine and proflavine are very similar. After extended (18h) treatment of growing cells with each drug the percentage loss of mtDNA or genetic loci was almost coincidental with the extent of petite induction.It was found that proflavine is equally as effective as euflavine in inhibiting mtDNA replication in isolated mitochondria in contrast to the differential between the drugs observed in vivo. However, proflavine and euflavine inhibit cellular growth at almost the same concentrations. It is therefore proposed that there is some intracellular permeability barrier which impedes proflavine access to the mitochondrial DNA replicating system.The petites induced by euflavine (and proflavine) are characterized by there being a preferential induction ofrho 0 petites lacking mtDNA as opposed torho - petites retaining mtDNA. This is in contrast to the relative proportions of such petites induced by ethidium bromide or berenil. A scheme for the production of petites by euflavine is presented, in which euflavine inhibits the replication of mtDNA, but does not cause direct fragmentation of mtDNA (unlike ethidium bromide and berenil). The proposed scheme explains the production of the high frequency ofrho o cells, as well as therho - cells induced by euflavine. The scheme also accounts for previous observations that euflavine only mutants growing cultures, and that the buds, but not mother cells, become petite.  相似文献   

6.
Instability of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) is a general problem from yeasts to humans. However, its genetic control is not well documented except in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. From the discovery, 50 years ago, of the petite mutants by Ephrussi and his coworkers, it has been shown that more than 100 nuclear genes directly or indirectly influence the fate of the rho+ mtDNA. It is not surprising that mutations in genes involved in mtDNA metabolism (replication, repair, and recombination) can cause a complete loss of mtDNA (rho0 petites) and/or lead to truncated forms (rho) of this genome. However, most loss-of-function mutations which increase yeast mtDNA instability act indirectly: they lie in genes controlling functions as diverse as mitochondrial translation, ATP synthase, iron homeostasis, fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial morphology, and so on. In a few cases it has been shown that gene overexpression increases the levels of petite mutants. Mutations in other genes are lethal in the absence of a functional mtDNA and thus convert this petite-positive yeast into a petite-negative form: petite cells cannot be recovered in these genetic contexts. Most of the data are explained if one assumes that the maintenance of the rho+ genome depends on a centromere-like structure dispensable for the maintenance of rho mtDNA and/or the function of mitochondrially encoded ATP synthase subunits, especially ATP6. In fact, the real challenge for the next 50 years will be to assemble the pieces of this puzzle by using yeast and to use complementary models, especially in strict aerobes.  相似文献   

7.
Following targeted disruption of the unique CYC1 gene, the petite-negative yeast, Kluyveromyces lactis, was found to grow fermentatively in the absence of cytochrome c-mediated respiration. This observation encouraged us to seek mitochondrial mutants by treatment of K. lactis with ethidium bromide at the highest concentration permitting survival. By this technique, we isolated four mtDNA mutants, three lacking mtDNA and one with a deleted mitochondrial genome. In the three isolates lacking mtDNA, a nuclear mutation is present that permits petite formation. The three mutations occur at two different loci, designated MGI1 and MGI2 (for Mitochondrial Genome Integrity). The mgi mutations convert K. lactis into a petite-positive yeast. Like bakers' yeast, the mgi mutants spontaneously produce petites with deletions in mtDNA and lose this genome at high frequency on treatment with ethidium bromide. We suggest that the MGI gene products are required for maintaining the integrity of the mitochondrial genome and that, petite-positive yeasts may be naturally altered in one or other of these genes.  相似文献   

8.
Flor yeasts grow and survive in fino sherry wine where the frequency of respiratory-deficient (petite) mutants is very low. Mitochondria from flor yeasts are highly acetaldehyde- and ethanol-tolerant, and resistant to oxidative stress. However, restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of mtDNA from flor yeast populations is very high and reflects variability induced by the high concentrations of acetaldehyde and ethanol of sherry wine on mtDNA. mtDNA RFLP increases as the concentration of these compounds also increases, but is followed by a total loss of mtDNA in petite cells. Yeasts with functional mitochondria (grande) are target of continuous variability, so that flor yeast mtDNA can evolve extremely rapidly and may serve as a reservoir of genetic diversity, whereas petite mutants are eventually eliminated because metabolism in sherry wine is oxidative.  相似文献   

9.
Petite-positive Saccharomyces yeasts can be roughly divided into the sensu stricto, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and sensu lato group, including Saccharomyces castellii; the latter was recently studied for transmission and the organisation of its mitochondrial genome. S. castellii mitochondrial molecules (mtDNA) carrying point mutations, which confer antibiotic resistance, behaved in genetic crosses as the corresponding point mutants of S. cerevisiae. While S. castellii generated spontaneous petite mutants in a similar way as S. cerevisiae, the petites exhibited a different inheritance pattern. In crosses with the wild type strains a majority of S. castellii petites was neutral, and the suppressivity in suppressive petites was never over 50%. The two yeasts also differ in organisation of their mtDNA molecules. The 25,753 bp sequence of S. castellii mtDNA was determined and the coding potential of both yeasts is similar. However, the S. castellii intergenic sequences are much shorter and do not contain sequences homologous to the S. cerevisiae biologically active intergenic sequences, as ori/rep/tra, which are responsible for the hyper-suppressive petite phenotype found in S. cerevisiae. The structure of one suppressive S. castellii mutant, CA38, was also determined. Apparently, a short direct intergenic repeat was involved in the generation of this petite mtDNA molecule.  相似文献   

10.
Summary This paper consolidates and refines the physical map of genetic loci previously established in our laboratory, by molecular analysis of seven genetically characterized new petites (deletion mutants of mtDNA). A modified DNA-DNA hybridization procedure employing filters simultaneously bound with mtDNA from two different petites has been used to measure the overlaps in mtDNA sequences between the different petite mutants.Thus, by analysis of three new petites carrying the antibiotic-resistance loci, ery1, cap1 and par1 on their mitochondrial genomes, it has now been possible to improve our estimation of the maximum distance between the cap1 and ery1 loci. The cap1, ery1 loci, and the 21S ribosomal RNA gene have now been mapped within 5 units in the same region (map position 0 to 5 units). Similarly, by analysis of four new petites carrying the O II and/or par1 loci on their mtDNAs, the map position of the O II locus is also more accurately determined within 2 units in a region (map position 34 to 36 units) between the par1 and ana1 loci. The positions of other loci including par1, the 15S ribosomal RNA gene, and some mit - loci are also discussed.We have thus extended our library of genetically and molecularly defined petite mutants, resulting in a set of petites having overlapping regions distributed throughout the entire wild-type mitochondrial genome, consistent with the idea that yeast mtDNA is physically circular.  相似文献   

11.
In cultures of the mit- mutant strain Mb12 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (carrying a mutation in the oli2 gene), 70% of the cells are petite mutants. More than 80% of the petites from Mb12 contain a particular mtDNA segment, denoted BB5, that is 880 bp long and carries a single MboI site. Thus, in cultures of Mb12, about 56% of the cells are petites containing the defective BB5 mtDNA genome, and only 30% are mit- cells containing parental Mb12 mtDNA. The BB5 mtDNA segment is also found in petites arising from the wild-type strain J69-1B (from which Mb12 was derived), but in this case mtDNA from only five out of 24 petites produced an 880 bp band after MboI digestion. Since J69-1B cultures carry a petite frequency of about 5%, approximately 1% of cells in J69-1B cultures contain the BB5 mtDNA segment. The difference between Mb12 and J69-1B cultures is reflected in the MboI digestion patterns of the respective mtDNAs. While Mb12 mtDNA contains a grossly superstoicheiometric 880 bp MboI fragment, the corresponding fragment in J69-1B mtDNA cannot be seen on stained gels, but can be readily visualized in Southern blots hybridized to a 32P-labelled DNA probe obtained from the 880 bp MboI fragment. The BB5 mtDNA segment was shown to contain the ori1 sequence (one of several very similar sequences in wild-type mtDNA thought to act as origins of replication of mtDNA) which confers the genetic property of very high suppressiveness on petites carrying this mtDNA. The efficient replication of BB5 mtDNA may contribute to its abundance in Mb12 cultures. Nevertheless, other factors must operate to influence the abundance of the BB5 mtDNA segment in cultures of different strains, the most important of which is likely to be the rate of excision of this mtDNA segment from the parental mtDNA genome.  相似文献   

12.
Induction of petite (cytoplasmic-respiration-deficient, rho-,rho-) mutations in yeast and deletion of mitochondrial drug-resistance genetic markers were compared after after treatment with ethidium and the corresponding photoaffinity probe, ethidium azide. Deletion of mitochondrial drug-resistance markers for chloramphenicol, erythromycin and oligomycin in these petite mutants was observed during prolonged treatment times with ethidium and with ethidium azide in the dark. A similar loss of drug-resistance markers was also observed in petites produced by photolytic treatment with the azide analogue, although the rate of loss appeared to be somewhat less. These results confirmed the usefulness of photoaffinity labeling with ethidium monoazide for studies of mitochondrial mutations.  相似文献   

13.
The presence of collagenase in Kupffer cells of the rat liver   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Non-chromosomal petites can be produced in Saccharomycescerevisiae by treatment with guanidine hydrochloride, a protein denaturing agent. Its efficiency in inducing petite mutants is comparable to the action of ethidium bromide. The high frequency of petite mutants observed is due to an induction effect rather than to a selection of preexisting mutants. Induction of petites by guanidine hydrochloride occurs even in non growing conditions, indicating that even parental cells are transformed in petites. Transformation depends upon the physiological properties of the cells, since repressed cells, cultivated in the presence of glucose, are more easily transformed than cells cultivated in ethanol.  相似文献   

14.
Petite-positivity - the ability to tolerate the loss of mtDNA - was examined after the treatment with ethidium bromide (EB) in over hundred isolates from the Saccharomyces/Kluyveromyces complex. The identity of petite mutants was confirmed by the loss of specific mtDNA DAPI staining patterns. Besides unequivocal petite-positive and petite-negative phenotypes, a few species exhibited temperature sensitive petite positive phenotype and petiteness of a few other species could be observed only at the elevated EB concentrations. Several yeast species displayed a mixed 'moot' phenotype, where a major part of the population did not tolerate the loss of mtDNA but several cells did. The genera from postwhole-genome duplication lineages (Saccharomyces, Kazachstania, Naumovia, Nakaseomyces) were invariably petite-positive. However, petite-positive traits could also be observed among the prewhole-genome duplication species.  相似文献   

15.
In cultures of the mit? mutant strain Mb12 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (carrying a mutation in the oli2 gene), 70% of the cells are petite mutants. More than 80% of the petites from Mb12 contain a particular mtDNA segment, denoted BB5, that is 880 bp long and carries a single MboI site. Thus, in cultures of Mb12, about 56% of the cells are petites containing the defective BB5 mtDNA genome, and only 30% are mit? cells containing parental Mb12 mtDNA. The BB5 mtDNA segment is also found in petites arising from the wild-type strain J69-1B (from which Mb12 was derived), but in this case mtDNA from only five out of 24 petites produced an 880 bp band after MboI digestion. Since J69-1B cultures carry a petite frequency of about 5%, approximately 1% of cells in J69-1B cultures contain the BB5 mtDNA segment. The difference between Mb12 and J69-1B cultures is reflected in the MboI digestion patterns of the respective mtDNAs. While Mb12 mtDNA contains a grossly superstoicheiometric 880 bp MboI fragment, the corresponding fragment in J69-1B mtDNA cannot be seen on stained gels, but can be readily visualized in Southern blots hybridized to a 32P-labelled DNA probe obtained from the 880 bp MboI fragment. The BB5 mtDNA segment was shown to contain the oril sequence (one of several very similar sequences in wild-type mtDNA thought to act as origins of replication of mtDNA) which confers the genetic property of very high suppressiveness on petites carrying this mtDNA. The efficient replication of BB5 mtDNA may contribute to its abundance in Mb12 cultures. Nevertheless, other factors must operate to influence the abundance of the BB5 mtDNA segment in cultures of different strains, the most important of which is likely to be the rate of excision of this mtDNA segment from the parental mtDNA genome.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Mitochondrial DNA was isolated from an oligomycin-resistant petite mutant of yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It had repeated sequences of 3600 base pairs. This segment was about one twentieth of the whole mtDNA of wild type yeast, which had a size of 74 kilo base pairs.This segment of mtDNA had one cleavage site for a restriction endonuclease, Hind II, which was more resistant to cleavage than the other Hind II sites in wild type mtDNA. It had two cleavage sites for Hha I and gave two Hha fragments, which were arranged alternatively. Digestion with Hae III gave four fragments and these fragments were mapped.Mitochondrial DNA of this mutant showed a loss of heterogeneity in a melting profile. It melted within a narrow range of temperature, which was similar to that of poly dA·poly dT. Its differential melting curve was significantly different from that of wild type mtDNA.Mapping of mtDNA of a wild type yeast was carried out with restriction endonucleases. Fragments of mtDNA, which were isolated from petites carrying oligomycin-erythromycin-chloramphenicol-resistance and erythromycin-chloramphenicol resistance were also mapped. Loci of oligomycin-resistance, erythromycin-resistance and chloramphenicol-resistance were investigated based on the maps of Eco R I fragments and Hind II fragments.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial DNA isolated from a series of nine petite yeast strains and from the parent grande strain was characterized by electron microscopic and renaturation kinetic analysis. The mtDNA2 from all strains contained a variety of branched molecules which may be intermediates of replication or recombination. Although no circles were observed in the grande mtDNA, all the petites contained circular mtDNA molecules. The size distribution of the circles conformed to an oligomeric series that was characteristic for each strain. In seven petites, the length series could be related to a single circle monomer size, ranging from 0.13 μm to 5.5 μm; and in two petites to two or more circular monomer lengths. In contrast to circular mtDNA, linear molecules showed no unique size distribution. Circle monomer lengths were linearly related to the kinetic complexity (κ2 or C0t12) of sheared total mtDNA in the seven petite strains that contained a predominant single series of circle lengths. Thus in each of these petite strains the circle monomer length defined the same DNA sequence present in the linear DNA molecules of non-unique length.  相似文献   

18.
We have shown previously that mutations in nuclear genes, termed MGI, for mitochondrial genome integrity, can convert the petite-negative yeast Kluyveromyces lactis into a petite-positive form with the ability to produce mitochondrial genome deletion mutants (Chen and Clark-Walker, Genetics, 133, 517-525, 1993). Here we describe that two genes, MGI2 and MGI5, encode the alpha- and gamma-subunits of mitochondrial F1-ATPase. Specific mutations, Phe443-->Ser and Ala333-->Val in MGI2, and Thr275-->Ala in MGI5, confer on cells the ability to produce petite mutants spontaneously with deletions in mitochondrial (mt) DNA and the capacity to lose their mitochondrial genomes upon treatment with ethidium bromide. Structural integrity of the F1 complex seems to be needed for expression of the Mgi- phenotype as null mutations in MGI2 and MGI5 remove the ability to form mtDNA deletions. It is suggested that mgi mutations allow petites to survive because an aberrant F1 complex prevents collapse of the mitochondrial inner membrane potential that normally occurs on loss of mtDNA-encoded F0 subunits.  相似文献   

19.
When recently arisen spontaneous petite mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are crossed, respiratory competent diploids can be recovered. Such restored strains can be divided into two groups having sectored or unsectored colony morphology, the former being due to an elevated level of spontaneous petite mutation. On the basis of petite frequency, the sectored strains can be subdivided into those with a moderate frequency (5–16%) and those with a high frequency (>60%) of petite formation. Each of the three categories of restored strains can be found on crossing two petites, suggesting either that the parental mutants contain a heterogeneous population of deleted mtDNAs at the time of mating or that different interactions can occur between the defective molecules. Restriction endonuclease analysis of mtDNA from restored strains that have a wild-type petite frequency showed that they had recovered a wild-type mtDNA fragmentation pattern. Conversely, all examined cultures from both categories of sectored strains contained aberrant mitochondrial genomes that were perpetuated without change over at least 200 generations. In addition, sectored colony siblings can have different aberrant mtDNAs. The finding that two sectored, restored strains from different crosses have identical but aberrant mtDNAs provides evidence for preferred deletion sites from the mitochondrial genome. Although it appears that mtDNAs from sectored strains invariably contain duplications, there is no apparent correlation between the size of the duplication and spontaneous petite frequency.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Compound Hoe 15 030 is an analogue of berenil which is as effective as berenil in inducing petite mutants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Hoe 15 030 has greater stability than berenil in aqueous solution, and is less toxic to yeast at high drug concentrations. Mutants of S. cerevisia strain J69-1B have been isolated which are resistant to the petite inducing effects of Hoe 15 030. Three mutant strains (HR7, HR8 and HR10) were characterized and each was shown to carry a recessive nuclear mutation determining resistance to Hoe 15 030. The degree of resistance to Hoe 15 030 is different for each mutant, and each was found to be co-ordinately cross-resistant both to berenil and to another analogue of berenil, Hoe 13 548. However, the three mutants show no cross-resistance to other unrelated petite inducing drugs, including ethidium bromide, euflavine and 1-methyl phenyl neutral red.Further studies on the mutants revealed that each strain exhibits characteristic new properties indicative of changes in mitochondrial membrane functions concerned with the replication (and probably also repair) of mitochondrial DNA. Thus, mutant HR7 is hypersensitive to petite induction by the detergent sodium dodecyl sulphate under conditions where the parent J69-1B is unaffected by this agent. Mutant HR8 is even more sensitive to sodium dodecyl sulphate than is HR7, and additionally shows a markedly elevated spontaneous petite frequency. Isolated mitochondria from strains HR8 and HR10 (but not HR7) show resistance to the inhibitory effects of Hoe 15 030 on the replication of mitochondrial DNA in vitro.  相似文献   

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