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A GENE, ALCA, AFFECTING THE LIFE CYCLE FORM EXPRESSED IN PHYSARUM POLYCEPHALUM
Christine L. Truitt 1, Charles S. Hoffman 1, and Charles E. Holt 1
1 Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
The usual sequence of forms in the Physarum polycephalum life cycle is plasmodiumsporeamoebaplasmodium. So-called "amoebaless life cycle" or alc mutants of this Myxomycete undergo a simplified plasmodiumsporeplasmodium life cycle. We have analyzed three independently isolated alc mutants and found in each case that the failure of the spores to give rise to amoebae is due to a recessive Mendelian allele. The three mutations are tightly linked to one another and belong to a single complementation group, alcA. The mutations are pleiotropic, not only interfering with the establishment of the amoebal form at spore germination, but also affecting the phenotype of alc amoebae, which occasionally arise from alc spores. The alc amoebae (1) grow more slowly than wild type, particularly at elevated temperatures; (2) tend to transform directly into plasmodia, circumventing the sexual fusion of amoebae that usually accompanies plasmodium formation; and (3) form plasmodia by the sexual mechanism less efficiently than wild-type amoebae. The various effects of an alc mutation seem to derive from mutation of a single gene, since reversion for one effect is always accompanied by reversion for the other effects. Moreover, a mutation, aptA1, that blocks direct plasmodium formation by alcA amoebae, also increases their growth rate to near normal. The manner of plasmodium formation in alcA strains differs significantly from that in another class of mutants, the gad mutants. Unlike gad amoebae, alcA amoebae need not reach a critical density in order to differentiate directly into plasmodia and do not respond to the extracellular inducer of differentiation. In addition, alcA differentiation is not prevented by a mutation, npfA1, that blocks direct differentiation by most gad amoebae.
Submitted on February 16, 1981Accepted on March 2, 1982