Affiliation:
1. The Rockefeller Institute, New York, New York
Abstract
Mahadevan
, P. R. (The Rockefeller Institute, New York, N.Y.),
and E. L. Tatum
. Relationship of the major constituents of the
Neurospora crassa
cell wall to wild-type and colonial morphology. J. Bacteriol.
90:
1073–1081. 1965.—The relationship of cell wall to morphology in
Neurospora crassa
was studied by correlating the levels of structural polymers of the cell wall with wild-type and colonial morphology. The cell wall of
N. crassa
contains at least four major complexes: a peptide-polysaccharide complex; two glucose polymers, one of which was found to be a laminarinlike β-1,3-glucan; and, lastly, chitin. The levels of one or more of these structural polymers are consistently altered in single-gene mutants with colonial growth, and in sorbose-induced colonial growth. The proportions of these polymers, particularly of the peptide-polysaccharide complex and the β-1,3-glucan, appear to be important to morphology.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
214 articles.
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