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UNIPARENTAL INHERITANCE OF MITOCHONDRIAL GENES IN YEAST: DEPENDENCE ON INPUT BIAS OF MITOCHONDRIAL DNA AND PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATIONS OF THE MECHANISM
C. William Birky Jr. 1, Catherine A. Demko 1, Philip S. Perlman 1, and Robert Strausberg 1
1 The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, previous studies on the
inheritance of mitochondrial genes controlling antibiotic resistance have
shown that some crosses produce a substantial number of uniparental zygotes
, which transmit to their diploid progeny mitochondrial alleles from
only one parent. In this paper, we show that uniparental zygotes are formed
especially when one parent (majority parent) contributes substantially more
mitochondrial DNA molecules to the zygote than does the other (minority) parent.
Cellular contents of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are increased in these experiments
by treatment with cycloheximide, alpha-factor, or the uvs
5 nuclear
mutation. In such a biased cross, some zygotes are uniparental for
mitochondrial alleles from the majority parent, and the frequency of such
zygotes increases with increasing bias. In two- and three-factor crosses,
the cap1, ery1, and oli1 loci behave coordinately, rather
than independently; minority markers tend to be transmitted or lost as a unit,
suggesting that the uniparental mechanism acts on entire mtDNA molecules rather
than on individual loci. This rules out the possibility that uniparental inheritance
can be explained by the conversion of minority markers to the majority alleles
during recombination. Exceptions to the coordinate behavior of different loci
can be explained by marker rescue via recombination. Uniparental
inheritance is largely independent of the position of buds on the zygote.
We conclude that it is due to the failure of minority markers to replicate
in some zygotes, possibly involving the rapid enzymatic destruction of such
markers. We have considered two general classes of mechanisms: (1) random
selection of molecules for replication, as for example by competition for
replicating sites on a membrane; and (2) differential marking of mtDNA molecules
in the two parents, possibly by modification enzymes, followed by a mechanism that
"counts" molecules and replicates only the majority type. These classes of
models are distinguished genetically by the fact that the first predicts that
the output frequency of a given allele among the progeny of a large number
of zygotes will approximately equal the average input frequency of that allele,
while the second class predicts that any input bias will be amplified in the
output. The data suggest that bias amplification does occur. We hypothesize
that maternal inheritance of mitochondrial or chloroplast genes in many organisms
may depend upon a biased input of organelle DNA molecules, which usually favors
the maternal parent, followed by failure of the minority (paternal) molecules
to replicate in many or all zygotes.
Revised on March 17, 1978