MATING-TYPE FUNCTIONS FOR MEIOSIS AND SPORULATION IN YEAST ACT THROUGH CYTOPLASM
Open Access
- 1 March 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 94 (3) , 597-605
- https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/94.3.597
Abstract
Given a nutritional regime marked by a low nitrogen level and the absence of fermentable carbon sources, conventional a/α diploid cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiue exhibit a complex developmental sequence that includes a round of premeiotic DNA replication, commitment to meiosis and the elaboration of mature tetrads containing viable ascospores. Ordinarily, haploid cells and diploid cells af genotype a/a and α/α fail to display these reactions under comparable conditions. Here, we describe a simple technique for sporulation of α/α and a/a cells. Cells of genotype α/α are mated to haploid a cells carrying the karl (karyogamy defective) mutation to yield heterokaryons containing the corresponding diploid and haploid nuclei. The karl strains mate normally, but nuclei in the resultant zygotes do not fuse. When heterokaryotic cells are inoculated into sporulation media, they produce asci with six spores. Four spores carry genotypes derived from the diploid nucleus and the other two posses the markers originating from the haploid nucleus, i.e., the diploid nucleus divides meiotically while the haploid nucleus apparently divides mitotically. Similarly, the a/a genome is "helped" to sporulate as a consequence of mating with α karl strains. The results allow us to conclude that the mating-type functions essential for meiosis and sporulation are communicated and act through the cytoplasm and that sporulation can be dissociated from typical meiosis. This procedure will facilitate the genetic analysis of strains that are otherwise unable to sporulate.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
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