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INTERCONVERSION OF YEAST MATING TYPES I. DIRECT OBSERVATIONS OF THE ACTION OF THE HOMOTHALLISM (HO) GENE
James B. Hicks 1 and Ira Herskowitz 2
1 Institute of Molecular Biology University of Oregon, Eugene,
Oregon 97403
2 Department of Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
97403
The HO gene promotes interconversion between a and
mating types. As a consequence, homothallic diploid cells are formed by mating
between siblings descended from a single
HO or a
HO spore. In order to determine the frequency and pattern of the mating-type
switch, we have used a simple technique by which the mating phenotype can
be assayed without losing the cell to the mating process itself. Specifically,
we have performed pedigree analysis on descendants of single homothallic spores,
testing these cells for sensitivity to
-factor.
The switch from
to a and vice versa is detectable after a minimum of two cell divisions.
50% of the clones tested showed switching by the four-cell stage. Of the four
cells descended from a single cell, only the oldest cell and its immediate
daughter are observed to change mating type. This pattern suggests that one
event in the switching process has occurred in the first cell division cycle.
Restriction of the switched mating-type to two particular cells may reflect
the action of the homothallism system followed by nonrandom segregation of
DNA strands in mitosis.
The mating behavior of cells which have sustained a change in mating type due to the HO gene is indistinguishable from that of heterothallic strains.
Submitted on August 28, 1975Revised on February 1, 1976
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