COMPLEMENTATION AND PRELIMINARY LINKAGE ANALYSIS OF ZYGOTE MATURATION MUTANTS OF THE HOMOTHALLIC ALGA, CHLAMYDOMONAS MONOICA
Author(s) -
Karen P. VanWinkleSwift,
Cynthia Burrascano
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/103.3.429
Subject(s) - homothallism , zygote , biology , complementation , genetics , ploidy , chlamydomonas , mutant , cell fusion , sexual reproduction , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , mating type , cell , embryogenesis
Sexual reproduction in Chlamydomonas monoica is homothallic: pair formation and cell fusion occur in clonal culture and give rise to a heavily walled diploid zygospore. During maturation of the young zygote, a distinctive "primary zygote wall" is released before the development of the highly reticulate zygospore wall. Using ethyl methanesulfonate and ultraviolet irradiation as mutagens, we have isolated 19 maturation-defective (zym) mutant strains which upon self-mating produce inviable zygotes. These zygotes fail to release a primary zygote wall, fail to develop the normal zygospore wall, and eventually undergo spontaneous lysis. In nearly all cases, the mutations appear to be expressed only in the diploid zygote; pleiotropic effects on vegetative cell growth or morphology are not evident.—Complementation testing performed on 17 of these mutants indicates that all are recessive and that they define seven distinct complementation groups. Preliminary tetrad analysis of two-factor and multifactor zym crosses provides no evidence for physical clustering of the maturation genes, and instead suggests that they are widely distributed throughout the nuclear genome.
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