Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40546
Abstract
Abstract
The Magnaporthe grisea BUF1 gene suffers high-frequency mutation in certain genetic crosses, resulting in buff-colored progeny. Analysis of 16 buf1 mutants arising from a cross with a mutation frequency of 25% revealed that, in every case, the BUF1 gene was deleted. The deletions occurred in only one of the parental chromosomes and were due to intrachromosomal recombination. Tetrad analysis revealed that deletions occurred in 44% of meioses and usually affected both chromatids of the mutable chromosome. This suggests that they happen before the premeiotic round of DNA synthesis. However, they were also almost entirely restricted to heteroallelic crosses. This, together with the discovery of numerous repetitive elements that were present only in the mutable BUF1 locus, suggests that the deletion process is sensitive to pairing interactions between homologous chromosomes, such that only unpaired loci are subject to deletion. Given that karyogamy is not supposed to occur until after premeiotic DNA replication in Pyrenomycetous fungi such as M. grisea, this latter observation would place the time of deletion during, or after, DNA synthesis. These conflicting results suggest that karyogamy might actually precede DNA replication in Pyrenomycetous fungi or that parts of the genome remain unreplicated until after karyogamy and subsequent chromosome pairing have taken place.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
11 articles.
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