Selective Effects of Purine and Pyrimidine Analogues and of Respiratory Inhibitors on Perithecial Development and Branching in Sordaria

Abstract
The initiation of perithecia in the homothallic ascomycete Sordaria fimicola was completely suppressed, without seriously inhibiting vegetative growth, by growing the fungus on an agar medium containing one of the following additions 1 [mu][image] 5-fluorouracil, 10 to 100 [mu][image] 6-azauracil, 8-azaguanine or 8-azaadihine, 50 to 500 [mu][image] cyanide or azide, 5% (w/v) casein hydrolysate. In contrast to the selective activity of the analogues of 3 RNA bases, whose inhibition could be reversed by the appropriate normal bases only, none of the analogues of thymine were active, neither were the thio-derivatives of RNA bases. Other inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis, like actinomycin D, puromycin and cycloheximide, were also without selective activity, although the last of these inhibited perithecial maturation at 0.1 [mu][image] concentration but not initiation. Amino acid analogues were inactive, as were the metabolic inhibitors thiourea, 2,4-dinitrophenol and fluoride. The compounds which inhibited the formation of perithecia also lowered the branching frequency of leading hyphae, but not their linear growth rates. Consequently, the branch densities were diminished in their presence. Hypotheses to account for these findings are discussed in terms of inhibition of growth in general, of the synthesis of some specific messenger RNAs, and RNA-mediated transport across membranes, the last of which seeming the most fruitful for further work.