MITOTIC CHROMOSOME LOSS IN A DISOMIC HAPLOID OF SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE
Open Access
- 1 March 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 79 (3) , 383-396
- https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/79.3.383
Abstract
Experiments designed to characterize the incidence of mitotic chromosome loss in a yeast disomic haploid were performed. The selective methods employed utilize the non-mating property of strains disomic for linkage group III and heterozygous at the mating type locus. The principal findings are: (1) The frequency of spontaneous chromosome loss in the disome is of the order 10-4 per cell; this value approximates the frequency in the same population of spontaneous mitotic exchange resulting in homozygosity at the mating type locus. (2) The recovered diploids are pure clones, and thus represent unique events in the disomic haploid. (3) Of the euploid chromosomes recovered after events leading to chromosome loss, approximately 90% retain the parental marker configuration expected from segregation alone; however, the remainder are recombinant for marker genes, and are the result of mitotic exchanges in the disome, especially in regions near the centromere. The recombinant proportion significantly exceeds that expected if chromosome loss and mitotic exchange in the disome were independent events. The data are consistent with a model proposing mitotic nondisjunction as the event responsible for chromosome loss in the disomic haploid.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- ON RECOMBINATION-DEFECTIVE MEIOTIC MUTANTS IN DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTERGenetics, 1974
- GENETIC ANALYSIS OF HYBRID STRAINS TRISOMIC FOR THE CHROMOSOME CONTAINING A FATTY ACID SYNTHETASE GENE COMPLEX (fas1) IN YEASTGenetics, 1973
- Radiation-Induced Recombination in Saccharomyces: Isolation and Genetic Study of Recombination-Deficient MutantsRadiation Research, 1972
- SPINDLES, SPINDLE PLAQUES, AND MEIOSIS IN THE YEAST SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE (HANSEN)The Journal of cell biology, 1971