Author:
Giri Dev Ashish,Rekha S.,Kasbekar Durgadas P.
Abstract
AbstractFour insertional or quasiterminal translocations (T) were recently introgressed from Neurospora crassa into N. tetrasperma. Crosses of two of the resulting TNt strains with N. tetrasperma N strains (N = normal sequence) produced more Dp than T and N homokaryotic progeny, although [T + N] and [Dp + Df] heterokaryotic progeny were made in roughly equal numbers. The T, N, and [T + N] progeny are derived from alternate segregation (ALT), whereas adjacent-1 segregation (ADJ) generates the Dp, Df, and [Dp + Df] types. Differential recovery of homokaryotic products from ALT and ADJ represents a novel and unprecedented type of meiotic drive. This drive contributed to our inability to introgress a larger insertions translocation, T(VR>VIL)UK3-41, into N. tetrasperma. We suggest that one or more Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller type incompatibility between N. crassa and N. tetrasperma genes in the TNt x N crosses might cause an insufficiency for a product required for ascospore maturation. Since the Df type is inviable, only four ascospores (Dp or [Dp + Df] types) share this limited resource in [Dp + Df] asci, whereas four to eight ascospores compete for it in [T + N] asci. This increases the chance that in asci with >4 ascospores none properly matures, and results in Dp progeny out-numbering T and N types.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory