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STUDIES ON THE GENETIC CONTROL OF RESISTANT SPORANGIUM FORMATION IN ALLOMYCES
Author(s) -
DeLong Sharon K.
Publication year - 1965
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1965.tb07277.x
Subject(s) - sporophyte , sporangium , biology , gametophyte , botany , locus (genetics) , ploidy , mutant , spore , genetics , gene , pollen
The diploid sporophyte of the phycomycetous fungus Allomyces arbuscula bears two types of sporangia: thin‐walled, colorless, ephemeral zoosporangia (ZS) and thick‐walled, dark‐brown, resistant sporangia (RS). Normal wild‐type cultures (strain Portugal IE) under standard conditions produce approximately 90% of their total sporangia as RS. These RS give the cultures a dark‐brown color. A mutant was induced with UV irradiation in which the ratio of ZS to RS was shifted so that only 20% of the total sporangia are RS. These cultures are a pale, tan color. Hybrids between the mutants and wild‐types produce ca. 65% RS and are also intermediate in the color of the culture. Meiotic segregation in the RS of the hybrid sporophytes gives gametophytes half of which when selfed produce mutant sporophytes and half of which produce wild‐type sporophytes. The shift from RS to ZS formation is thus considered to be the result of a one‐gene mutation at a locus ‘R.’ The haploid gametophytes of wild‐type strains have in addition to male and female gametangia a small number (2‐4%) of RS. In mutant gametophytes the percent RS has dropped to 0.1‐0.2%. The proposed genotypes at the ‘R’ locus in Allomyces arbuscula are: wild‐type sporophytes (RR), hybrid sporophytes (Rr), mutant sporophytes (rr), wild‐type gametophytes (R) and mutant gametophytes (r).

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