DUPLICATED GENES PRODUCING TRANSPOSABLE CONTROLLING ELEMENTS FOR THE MATING-TYPE DIFFERENTIATION IN SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE

1 The Central Research Institute, Suntory Ltd., Wakayamadai, Shimamoto-cho, Mishima-gun, Osaka 618, Japan

Mutation of the two homothallic genes, HMLalpha/HMLa and HMRa/HMRalpha, in homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied. Of 11 mutants of the HMLalpha gene, eight were due to a phenotypic mutation from HMLalpha to HMLa, i.e., a mutation causing a change in function of the original HML allele to that of the other HML allele (functional mutation), and three were due to a defective mutation at the HMLalpha gene, i.e., a mutation causing a nonfunctional allele (nonfunctional mutation). All 14 mutants of the HMRa gene, on the other hand, were due to a phenotypic mutation from HMRa to HMRalpha i.e., a functional mutation. Phenotypic reverse mutations, i.e., HMLa to HMLalpha and HMRalpha to HMRa, were also observed in the cultivation of EMS (ethyl methanesulfonate) treated spores having the HO HMRalpha HMLa genotype. Mutation from heterothallic cells to homothallism was observed in a nonfunctional mutant of the HMLalpha gene, by mutagenesis with EMS, but not in the functional mutants of the HMLalpha and HMRa genes or in the authentic strains having the alpha HO HMRalpha HMLalpha (alpha Hp) and a HO HMRa HMLa (a Hq) genotypes. These observations suggest that the functional mutation is not caused by the direct mutation from a homothallic allele to the opposite, but by replacement of a transposable genic element produced from a homothallic locus with a region of a different homothallic locus. These observations also support the controlling-element model and the cassette model, which have been proposed to explain the mating-type differentiation by the homothallic genes.

Submitted on June 4, 1979
Revised on November 20, 1979