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1.
Summary Mutations at seven recombinationally distinct chloroplast loci confer antibiotic resistance on chloroplast ribosomes of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Assays of polynucleotide-directed amino acid incorporation by ribosomes reconstituted from mutant and wild type subunits demonstrate that streptomycin, neamine/kanamycin and spectinomycin resistance mutations specifically affect the small ribosomal subunit, whereas mutations to erythromycin resistance affect the large subunit. Although in each case the subunit site of antibiotic resistance is the same as that observed in analogous mutations in Escherichia coli, the number of loci conferring resistance to a given antibiotic differs in the two organisms. We have previously shown that streptomycin resistance mutations in Chlamydomonas map at five discrete loci (one nuclear and four chloroplast), and that mutations to neamine/kanamycin and spectinomycin resistance appear to define a single chloroplast locus. Results presented here confirm our previous report that all chloroplast erythromycin resistance mutations isolated to date fall into two recombinationally distinct loci, and indicate that mutants at one of these loci may be further divided on the basis of their level of cross resistance to other macrolide antibiotics.  相似文献   

2.
《Plant science》1987,49(2):85-88
Mutants of Chlamydomanas smithii resistant to chlorate were induced after UV irradiation. Some were unable to grow on nitrate and suspected to be defective in nitrate reductase. One of them (nit-a) was analyzed and shown to complement nit-1 nit-2 of C. reinhardtii.Mutants resistant to streptomycin, spectinomycin or erythromycin selected from nit-a pre-grown in the presence of 5-fluorodeoxyridine. Two spectinomycin resistant strains were genetically analyzed from crosses with C. reinhardtii carrying different chloroplast mutations. The transmission of resistance was shown to be non-Mendelian and similar to that obtained in intraspecific crosses involving C. reinhardtii chloroplast mutants.Mutants lacking a cell wall (CW) were selected after UV treatment on the basis of the particular flat amoeboid shape of the colonies. Seven of them were tested for complementation with CW15 and CWd mutants of C. reinhardtii: none was found to be allelic with these two mutations.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Chloroplast gene mutations which confer antibiotic resistance on chloroplast ribosomes of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been tested for allelism and mapped by recombination analysis of progeny from biparental zygote clones. Thirty-one independently isolated streptomycin resistant mutants have chloroplast ribosomes which are resistant to this drug in an assay based on misreading of isoleucine in response to a poly U template, and comprise one nuclear and four chloroplast gene loci. Four mutants resistant to spectinomycin, and three mutants resistant to neamine and kanamycin, which have chloroplast ribosomes resistant to their respective antibiotics in poly U directed phenylalanine incorporation, appear to map in a single chloroplast gene locus. Representative alleles of this nr/spr locus, the four streptomycin resistance loci, and two chloroplast gene loci for erythromycin resistance, have been analyzed in a series of parallel crosses to establish the following map order for these seven genes in the chloroplast genome: er-u-la-er-u-37-nr-u-2-1/spr-u-1-H-4-sr-u-2-23-sr-u-2-60-sr-u-sm3-sr-u-sm2. These seven genes may constitute a ribosomal region within the chloroplast genome of Chlamydomonas comparable to the ribosomal gene clusters in bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants resistant to the herbicide sulfometuron methyl (SM) were isolated and characterized. Growth of C. reinhardtii is sensitive to inhibition by SM at a concentration of 1 micromolar. Four mutants resistant to 10- to 100-fold higher concentrations were isolated. All possess a form of acetolactate synthase (ALS) whose specific activity in cell extracts is 100- to 1000-fold more resistant to SM than is the specific activity of wild-type enzyme. Only one mutant had abnormally low ALS specific activity in the absence of SM. All mutations were inherited as single lesions in the nuclear genome and were expressed in heterozygous diploids. The mutations in two strains mapped to linkage group IX about 30 centimorgans from streptomycin resistance and on the same side of the centromere, and in genetic crosses between mutants no segregation was observed. Accordingly, all mutations are tentatively assigned to gene smr-1. Herbicide resistance appears to be suitable as a selectable marker for molecular transformation in this organism.  相似文献   

5.
Lee RW  Lemieux C 《Genetics》1986,113(3):589-600
The first two non-Mendelian gene mutations to be identified in Chlamydomonas moewusii are described. These putative chloroplast gene mutations include one for resistance to streptomycin (sr-nM1) and one for resistance to erythromycin (er-nM1). In one- and two-factor reciprocal crosses, usually over 90% of the germinating zygospores transmitted these mutations and their wild-type alternatives from both parents (biparental zygospores); the remaining zygospores transmitted exclusively the non-Mendelian markers of the mating-type "plus" parent. Among the biparental zygospores, a strong bias in the transmission of non-Mendelian alleles from the mating-type "plus" parent was indicated by an excess of meiotic and postmeiotic mitotic progeny that were homoplasmic for non-Mendelian alleles from this parent compared to those that were homoplasmic for the non-Mendelian alleles from the mating-type "minus" parent. At best, weak linkage was detected between the sr-nM1 and er-nM1 loci. Non-Mendelian, chloroplast gene markers in Chlamydomonas eugametos and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed a predominantly uniparental mode of transmission from the mating-type "plus" parent in crosses performed under the same conditions used for the C. moewusii crosses.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Escherichia coli strains with preexisting ribosomal mutations were used in order to isolate further ribosomal mutations. The ribosomal mutations used were resistance to erythromycin, spectinomycin, streptomycin or kasugamycin. These mutations cause alteration of specific ribosomal elements, L4, S5, S12 proteins and 16S rRNA respectively. Mutations have been introduced into strains carrying one, two or three of these mutations. Strains with all possible combinations of these four mutations were constructed. The phenotypes of all isolated mutants were tested, and frequently the strains lost one or more of their pre-existing resistances.Thus, functional interactions were revealed among proteins, as well as RNA and proteins within the 30 S ribosomal subunit and as well as between the 30 S and the 50 S ribosomal subunits.  相似文献   

7.
Six chloroplast gene mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii resistant to spectinomycin, erythromycin, or streptomycin have been assessed for antibiotic resistance of their chloroplast ribosomes. Four of these mutations clearly confer high levels of antibiotic resistance on the chloroplast ribosomes both in vivo. Although one mutant resistant to streptomycin and one resistant to spectinomycin have chloroplast ribosomes as sensitive to antibiotics as those of wild type in vivo, these mutations can be shown to alter the wildtype sensitivity of chloroplast ribosomes in polynucleotide-directed amino acid incorporation in vitro. Genetic analysis of these six chloroplast mutants and three similar mutants (Sager, 1972), two of which have been shown to affect chloroplast ribosomes (Mets and Bogorad, 1972; Schlanger and Sager, 1974), indicates that in Chlamydomonas at least three chloroplast gene loci can affect streptomycin resistance of chloroplast ribosomes and that two can affect erythromycin resistance. The three spectinomycin-resistant mutants examined appear to be alleles at a single chloroplast gene locus, but may represent mutations at two different sites within the same gene. Unlike wild type, the streptomycin and spectinomycin resistant mutants which have chloroplast ribosomes sensitive to antibiotics in vivo, grow well in the presence of antibiotic by respiring exogenously supplied acetate as a carbon source, and have normal levels of cytochrome oxidase activity and cyanide-sensitive respiration. We conclude that mitochondrial protein synthesis in these mutants is resistant to these antibiotics, whereas in wild type it is sensitive. To explain the behavior of these two chloroplast gene mutants as well as other one-step mutants which are resistant both photosynthetically and when respiring acetate in the dark, we have postulated that a mutation in a single chloroplast gene may result in alteration of both chloroplast and mitochondrial ribosomes. Mitochondrial resistance would appear to be the minimal necessary condition for survival of all such mutants, and antibiotic-resistant chloroplast ribosomes would be necessary for survival only under photosynthetic conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Summary A major obstacle to out understanding of the mechanisms governing the inheritance, recombination and segregation of chloroplast genes in Chlamydomonas is that the majority of antibiotic resistance mutations that have been used to gain insights into such mechanisms have not been physically localized on the chloroplast genome. We report here the physical mapping of two chloroplast antibiotic resistance mutations: one conferring cross-resistance to erythromycin and spiramycin in Chlamydomonas moewusii (er-nM1) and the other conferring resistance to streptomycin in the interfertile species C. eugametos (sr-2). The er-nM1 mutation results from a C to G transversion at a well-known site of macrolide resistance within the peptidyl transferase loop region of the large subunit rRNA gene. This locus, designated rib-2 in yeast mitochondrial DNA, corresponds to residue C-2611 in the 23 S rRNA of Escherichia coli. The sr-2 locus maps within the small subunit (SSU) rRNA gene at a site that has not been described previously. The mutation results from an A to C transversion at a position equivalent to residue A-523 in the E. coli 16 S rRNA. Although this region of the E. coli SSU rRNA has no binding affinity for streptomycin, it binds to ribosomal protein S4, a protein that has long been associated with the response of bacterial cells to this antibiotic. We propose that the sr-2 mutation indirectly affects the nearest streptomycin binding site through an altered interaction between a ribosomal protein and the SSU rRNA.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Among a collection of obligate photoautotrophic (dark-dier,dk) mutants isolated inChlamydomonas reinhardtii, two have been found which are inherited in crosses to wild type in a non-Mendelian, biparental and apparently random fashion. F1 progeny include not only cells which show thedk and wildtype parental phenotypes but also many which possess intermediate phenotypes between wild type anddk. When F1 progeny withdk, intermediate or wild-type phenotype were backcrossed to wild type, thedk phenotype continued to be inherited in a biparental and random fashion. Upon selection, neither mutant formed stable clones producing onlydk progeny, suggesting that the two mutants segregatedk and wild-type progeny somatically and that the homozygousdk condition may be lethal. The biparental transmission of these two non-Mendeliandk mutations resembles the transmission of acriflavin-inducedminute mutations ofChlamydomonas and is distinct from the uniparentally inherited chloroplast mutations of this alga. Both thedk andminute mutations may alter mitochondrial DNA and thereby alter mitochondrial functions.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Ribosomal proteins from chloroplasts of Nicotiana tabacum L. (cv. Petit Havana) and of SRl, a mutant derived from it, with uniparentally inherited streptomycin resistance, were characterised by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. From the 67 proteins identified, one has an altered electrophoretic mobility when isolated from the mutant. Streptomycin resistance of the SRl mutant therefore seems to be the consequence of a mutation in the chloroplast DNA coding for a chloroplast ribosomal protein.  相似文献   

11.
The transmission of two non-Mendelian drug resistance markers has been studied in crosses of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii involving diploids and aneuploids with different mating type genotypes. Under normal laboratory conditions for gametogenesis, mating and zygote maturation, the transmission pattern of the non-Mendelian markers sr-u-1 (resistance to streptomycin) and spr-u-1-27-3 (resistance to spectinomycin) is primarily determined by the mating type genotypes of the parental cells. Our results confirm and expand an earlier observation suggesting that an apparent codominant function of the female (mt+) allele in regulating chloroplast gene transmission in meiosis appears to be distinct and separate from its recessive function in regulating mating behavior. The chloroplast DNA complement (as indexed by the number of extranuclear DNA-containing bodies) may exert a secondary effect on the transmission of these markers. Within a mating type group (mt+/mt- or mt-/mt-) a cell line with more chloroplast DNA tended to transmit its non-Mendelian markers more frequently than a cell line with less chloroplast DNA.  相似文献   

12.
A number of Solanum nigrum mutants resistant to the antibiotics spectinomycin, streptomycin and lincomycin have been isolated from regenerating leaf strips after mutagenesis with nitroso-methylurea. Selection of streptomycin- and spectinomycin-resistant mutants has been described earlier. Lincomycin-resistant mutants show resistance to higher levels of the antibiotic than used in the initial selection, and in the most resistant mutant (Ll7A1) maternal inheritance of the trait was demonstrated. The lincomycin-resistant mutant L17A1 and a streptomycin plus spectinomycin resistant double mutant (StSpl) were chosen for detailed molecular characterisation. Regions of the plastid DNA, within the genes encoding 16S and 23S rRNA and rps12 (3′) were sequenced. For spectinomycin and lincomycin resistance, base changes identical to those in similar Nicotiana mutants were identified. Streptomycin resistance is associated with an A → C change at codon 87 of rps 12 (converting a lysine into a glutamine), three codons upstream from a mutation earlier reported for Nicotiana. This site has not previously been implicated in streptomycin resistance mutations of higher plants, but has been found in Escherichia coli. The value of these mutants for studies on plastid genetics is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We have isolated a nuclear mutant (tsp-1) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii which is resistant to thiostrepton, an antibiotic that blocks bacterial protein synthesis. The tsp-1 mutant grows slowly in the presence or absence of thiostrepton, and its chloroplast ribosomes, although resistant to the drug, are less active than chloroplast ribosomes from the wild type. Chloroplast ribosomal protein L-23 was not detected on stained gels or immunoblots of total large subunit proteins from tsp-1 probed with antibody to the wild-type L-23 protein from C. reinhardtii. Immunoprecipitation of proteins from pulse-labeled cells showed that tsp-1 synthesizes small amounts of L-23 and that the mutant protein is stable during a 90 min chase. Therefore the tsp-1 phenotype is best explained by assuming that the mutant protein synthesized is unable to assemble into the large subunit of the chloroplast ribosome and hence is degraded over time. L-23 antibodies cross-react with Escherichia coli r-protein L11, which is known to be a component of the GTPase center of the 50S ribosomal subunit. Thiostrepton-resistant mutants of Bacillus megaterium and B. subtilis lack L11, show reduced ribosome activity, and have slow growth rates. Similarities between the thiostreptonresistant mutants of bacteria and C. reinhardtii and the immunological relatedness of Chlamydomonas L-23 to E. coli L11 suggest that L-23 is functionally homologous to the bacterial r-protein L11.  相似文献   

14.
Mutants resistant to streptomycin, spectinomycin, neamine/kanamycin and erythromycin define eight genetic loci in a linear linkage group corresponding to about 21 kb of the circular chloroplast genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. With one exception, all of these mutants represent single base-pair changes in conserved regions of the genes encoding the 16S and 23S chloroplast ribosomal RNAs. Streptomycin resistance can result from changes at the bases equivalent to Escherichia coli 13, 523, and 912-915 in the 16S gene, or from mutations in the rps12 gene encoding chloroplast ribosomal protein S12. In the 912-915 region of the 16S gene, three mutations were identified that resulted in different levels of streptomycin resistance in vitro. Although the three regions of the 16S rRNA mutable to streptomycin resistance are widely separated in the primary sequence, studies by other laboratories of RNA secondary structure and protein cross-linking suggest that all three regions are involved in a common ribosomal neighborhood that interacts with ribosomal proteins S4, S5 and S12. Three different changes within a conserved region of the 16S gene, equivalent to E. coli bases 1191-1193, confer varying levels of spectinomycin resistance, while resistance to neamine and kanamycin results from mutations in the 16S gene at bases equivalent to E. coli 1408 and 1409. Five mutations in two genetically distinct erythromycin resistance loci map in the 23S rDNA of C. reinhardtii, at positions equivalent to E. coli 2057-2058 and 2611, corresponding to the rib3 and rib2 loci of yeast mitochondria respectively. Although all five mutants are highly resistant to erythromycin, they differ in levels of cross-resistance to lincomycin and clindamycin. The order and spacing of all these mutations in the physical map are entirely consistent with our genetic map of the same loci and thereby validate the zygote clone method of analysis used to generate this map. These results are discussed in comparison with other published maps of chloroplast genes based on analysis by different methods using many of the same mutants.  相似文献   

15.
The ribosomal protein gene rps4 was cloned and sequenced from the chloroplast genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The N-terminal 213 amino acid residues of the S4 protein are encoded in the single-copy region (SCR) of the genome, while the C-terminal 44 amino acid residues are encoded in the inverted repeat (IR). The deduced 257 amino acid sequence of C. reinhardtii S4 is considerably longer (by 51–59 residues) than S4 proteins of other photosynthetic species and Escherichia coli, due to the presence of two internal insertions and a C-terminal extension. A short conserved C-terminal motif found in all other S4 proteins examined is missing from the C. reinhardtii protein. In E. coli, mutations in the S4 protein suppress the streptomycin-dependent (sd) phenotype of mutations in the S12 protein. Because we have been unable to identify similar S4 mutations among suppressors of an sd mutation in C. reinhardtii S12 obtained using UV mutagenesis, we made site-directed mutations [Arg68 (CGT) to Len (CTG and CTT)] in the wild-type rps4 gene equivalent to an E. coli Gln53 to Len ribosomal ambiguity mutation (ram), which suppresses the sd phenotype and decreases translational accuracy. These mutants were tested for their ability to transform the sd S 12 mutation of C. reinhardtii to streptomycin independence. The streptomycin-independent isolates obtained by biolistic transformation all possessed the original sd mutation in rps12, but none had the expected donor Leu68 mutations in rps4. Instead, six of 15 contained a Gln73 (CAA) to Pro (CCA) mutation five amino acids downstream from the predicted mutant codon, irrespective of rps4 donor DNA. Two others contained six- and ten-amino acid, in-frame insertions at S4 positions 90 and 92 that appear to have been induced by the biolistic process itself. Eight streptomycin-independent isolates analyzed had wild-type rps4 genes and may possess mutations identical to previously isolated suppressors of sd that define at least two additional chloroplast loci. Cloned rps4 genes from streptomycin-independent isolates containing the Gln73 to Pro mutation and the 6-amino acid insertion in r-protein S4 transform the sd strain to streptomycin independence.  相似文献   

16.
Chloroplast DNA base substitutions: an experimental assessment   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An experimental assessment was carried out to determine directly the frequency and types of spontaneous base substitutions that occur in chloroplast DNA. A target site within the chloroplast 16S rRNA gene of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was chosen for the assay. Mutations at this site were known to confer spectinomycin resistance and simultaneously result in the loss of an AatII cleavage site. In the experiments reported here, base substitutions at any individual base occurred at a frequency in the range of 0.9–11 per 109 viable cells plated. Four new mutations that confer resistance to spectinomycin were identified at the target site in the Chlamydomonas chloroplast 16S rRNA gene. When the relative rates of transition and transversion mutations were quantified, a bias toward transversions was observed. The prominence of A/T C/G transversions in the observed mutation spectrum suggests that oxidative damage may be the major cause of base substitution mutations within the chloroplast.  相似文献   

17.
The 5′ untranslated region of the chloroplast psbA mRNA, encoding the D1 protein, is processed in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Processing occurs just upstream of a consensus Shine-Dalgarno sequence and results in the removal of 54 nucleotides from the 5′ terminus, including a stem-loop element identified previously as an important structure for D1 expression. Examination of this processing event in C. reinhardtii strains containing mutations within the chloroplast or nuclear genomes that block psbA translation reveals a correlation between processing and ribosome association. Mutations within the 5′ untranslated region of the psbA mRNA that disrupt the Shine-Dalgarno sequence, acting as a ribosome binding site, preclude translation and prevent mRNA processing. Similarly, nuclear mutations that specifically affect synthesis of the D1 protein specifically affect processing of the psbA mRNA. In vitro, loss of the stem-loop element does not prohibit the binding of a message-specific protein complex required for translational activation of psbA upon illumination. These results are consistent with a hierarchical maturation pathway for chloroplast messages, mediated by nuclear-encoded factors, that integrates mRNA processing, message stability, ribosome association, and translation.  相似文献   

18.
Nicotiana plumbaginifolia protoplasts were directly transformed by PEG treatment with a cloned 16S rRNA gene isolated from a double antibiotic-resistant Nicotiana tabacum plastid mutant. Putative plastid transformants were selected in cell culture by their spectinomycin resistance and identified by their unselected streptomycin resistance. Alternatively, cell lines were selected in the presence of both antibiotics. The cell line (and its regenerated plants) selected solely for spectinomycin resistance demonstrated an extensive segregation of streptomycin resistance in subsequent tests, while the double-selected line showed stable resistance for both antibiotics. The resistance markers were inherited maternally. In the putative plastid transformants the origin of the resistance mutations was identified by the absence of an Aat ll site, missing in the donor N. tabacum plastid gene (spectinomycin resistance site) but present in that of wild-type N. plumbaginifolia , and a sequence analysis of the particular nucleotide changes in both resistance sites. Restriction enzyme analysis of total plastid DNA (ptDNA), and the recloning and full sequencing of the fragment introduced, investigated in one of the plastid transformants, showed no DNA rearrangements accompanied with the integration process. Sequence analysis indicated a targeted, homologous integration of the DNA fragment introduced but an unexpectedly complete homology of the parental ptDNA sequences in this region prevented the location of borders. Although the frequency of plastid transformant colonies (2 × 10−5) should still be improved, this method for stable chloroplast DNA transformation is comparable with or more efficient than the particle bombardment techniques.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Several mutations conferring resistance to streptomycin, kanamycin, spectinomycin, erythromycin, and lincomycin on the group A streptococcal strain 56188 have been mapped by two- and three-point crosses using transduction with bacteriophage A25. The markers are located in two linkage regions too distant to be cotransduced. One harbors the streptomycin and kanamycin loci which are transduced jointly at 78% and the other bears loci for spectinomycin (spc), erythromycin (eryA), and lincomycin (linA) resistance, in this order. spc and linA are cotransduced at a frequency of about 27%. Analysis of three-point crosses involving spc-4, eryA300, and linA12 according to the Wu model for random general transduction shows consistency of the theoretical predictions with the experimental data and indicates that the intervals of the above sequence are about 22% and 6% of the average length of the transduced piece.  相似文献   

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