COCHLIOBOLUS SATIVUS: IV. DRUG-RESISTANT, COLOR, AND NUTRITIONALLY EXACTING MUTANTS
- 1 November 1961
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 39 (7) , 1695-1704
- https://doi.org/10.1139/b61-147
Abstract
Auxotrophic mutants of Cochliobolus sativus were obtained from survivors of ultraviolet radiation by a modified total-isolation technique. Five or six hyphal tip isolations made from each survivor were tested for nutritional deficiencies. Although 0.48% of the survivors yielded auxotrophs, only about one-third of the hyphal tip isolations from these survivors were auxotrophic. Apparently, mutation in a multinucleate propagule resulted in a heterokaryotic culture and only some of the isolations from a culture were homokaryotic for the mutation. Some of the mutants were morphologically distinct from their parent and one, a methionineless strain, had white spores. Results indicated that recurrent requirements for growth occurred at different mutational sites.A strain resistant to the antibiotic anisomycin appeared as a spontaneous mutation. This strain grew at 1500 and its spores germinated at 1750 p.p.m.; wild-type isolates grew only at 75 and their spores germinated at 100 p.p.m. of the drug. The resistant mutant was pathogenic to wheat seedlings.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- COCHLIOBOLUS SATIVUS: III. EFFECT OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATIONCanadian Journal of Botany, 1960
- A Replica Plating Technique for the Isolation of Nutritionally Exacting Mutants of a Filamentous Fungus (Aspergillus nidulans)Journal of General Microbiology, 1959
- THE SEPARATION AND ISOLATION OF PARTICULAR BIOCHEMICAL MUTANTS OF NEUROSPORA BY DIFFERENTIAL GERMINATION OF CONIDIA, FOLLOWED BY FILTRATION AND SELECTIVE PLATINGProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1954
- Problems in microbial geneticsHeredity, 1948
- Experiments with Different Methods of Isolating Physiological Mutations of Filamentous FungiNature, 1947