Genetics, Vol. 159, 537-543, October 2001, Copyright © 2001

Epistatic and Synergistic Interactions Between Circadian Clock Mutations in Neurospora crassa

Louis W. Morgana and Jerry F. Feldmana
a Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064

Corresponding author: Jerry F. Feldman, Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064., feldman{at}biology.ucsc.edu (E-mail)

Communicating editor: R. H. DAVIS

We identified a series of epistatic and synergistic interactions among the circadian clock mutations of Neurospora crassa that indicate possible physical interactions among the various clock components encoded by these genes. The period-6 (prd-6) mutation, a short-period temperature-sensitive clock mutation, is epistatic to both the prd-2 and prd-3 mutations. The prd-2 and prd-3 long-period mutations show a synergistic interaction in that the period length of the double mutant strain is considerably longer than predicted. In addition, the prd-2 prd-3 double mutant strain also exhibits overcompensation to changes in ambient temperature, suggesting a role in the temperature compensation machinery of the clock. The prd-2, prd-3, and prd-6 mutations also show significant interactions with the frq7 long-period mutation. These results suggest that the gene products of prd-2, prd-3, and prd-6 play an important role in both the timing and temperature compensation mechanisms of the circadian clock and may interact with the FRQ protein.





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