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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Current genetics 10 (1986), S. 397-403 
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ; Nitrate reductase ; Complementation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary In vivo complementation between different wild and mutant strains defective for nitrate assimilation has been performed by isolating diploid strains from the appropriate crosses. Twenty-two diploids homozygous or heterozygous with respect to nitrate reduction and able to grow on nitrate medium were obtained and their diploid character demonstrated from analyses of mating type, cell volume, nuclear size and progeny of crosses with haploid wild-type. All diploids were assayed for overall- and terminal-nitrate reductase (NR) activity and for the occurrence of the NR-diaphorase subunit. Data on NR activities in heterozygotes carrying mutation(s) in structural gene(s) (nit-1 or nit-1a, nit-1b) agree with the heteromultimeric nature of the enzyme complex previously described (Franco et al. (1984) EMBO J 3: 1403–1407), and indicate that subunits are exchangeable to form hybrid enzymes. In addition, in vitro complementation tests with mutant nit-1 of C. reinhardtii indicate that this mutant has defective NR-diaphorase subunits but intact terminal subunits. Super-repression caused by the mutant allele nit-2 is suppressed by the wild allele in heterozygotes, which suggests a positive control by the nit-2 product on structural gene(s) transcription. Mutant alleles of genes for the biosynthesis of molybdenum-containing cofactor, either nit-4 or nit-5 and nit-6, were recessive in diploids carrying them. The mutant allele of nit-3, from strain 307, was codominant in all heterozygotes suggesting that nit-3 codes for a protein whose activity is limiting for the molybdenum-cofactor biosynthetic pathway.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: barley ; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ; Nicotiana plumbaginifolia ; nitrate transport ; Nrt2 expression ; RT-PCR
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A family of high-affinity nitrate transporters has been identified in Aspergillus nidulans and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and recently homologues of this family have been cloned from a higher plant (barley). Based on six of the peptide sequences most strongly conserved between the barley and C. reinhardtii polypeptides, a set of degenerate primers was designed to permit amplification of the corresponding genes from other plant species. The utility of these primers was demonstrated by RT-PCR with cDNA made from poly(A)+ RNA from barley, C. reinhardtii and Nicotiana plumbaginifolia. A PCR fragment amplified from N. plumbaginifolia was used as probe to isolate a full-length cDNA clone which encodes a protein, NRT2;1Np, that is closely related to the previously isolated crnA homologue from barley. Genomic Southern blots indicated that there are only 1 or 2 members of the Nrt2 gene family in N. plumbaginifolia. Northern blotting showed that the Nrt2 transcripts are most strongly expressed in roots. The effects of external treatments with different N sources showed that the regulation of the Nrt2 gene(s) is very similar to that reported for nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase genes: their expression was strongly induced by nitrate but was repressed when reduced forms of N were supplied to the roots.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular genetics and genomics 206 (1987), S. 414-418 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Ammonium transport ; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ; Methylammonium resistance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary A methylammonium-resistant mutant, named hereafter strain 2170 (ma-1), was isolated for the first time from a eukaryotic phototrophic organism. Mutant 2170 from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii carries a single mendelian mutation which results in a decreased rate of uptake of both ammonium and methylammonium without being affected either in uptake of nitrate or nitrite or any of the tested enzyme activities related to ammonium assimilation. Mutant cells could not use methylammonium as nitrogen source nor excrete ammonium into the medium but they had derepressed nitrate and nitrite reductases when growing in the presence of ammonium. Mutant 2170 also exhibited a diminished methylammonium transport rate in comparison with the wild-type cells. We conclude that mutant 2170 is affected in a transport system responsible for the entrance of both ammonium and methylammonium into the cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Molecular genetics and genomics 237 (1993), S. 429-438 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ; Chlorate resistance ; Nitrate reductase ; Nitrate transport
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Spontaneous chlorate-resistant (CR) mutants have been isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wildtype strains. Most of them, 244, were able to grow on nitrate minimal medium, but 23 were not. Genetic and in vivo complementation analyses of this latter group of mutants indicated that they were defective either at the regulatory locus nit-2, or at the nitrate reductase (NR) locus nit-1, or at very closely linked loci. Some of these nit-1 or nit-2 mutants were also defective in pathways not directly related to nitrate assimilation, such as those of amino acids and purines. Chlorate treatment of wild-type cells resulted in both a decrease in cell survival and an increase in mutant cells resistant to a number of different chemicals (chlorate, methylammonium, sulphanilamide, arsenate, and streptomycin). The toxic and mutagenic effects of chlorate in minimal medium were not found when cells were grown either in darkness or in the presence of ammonium, conditions under which nitrate uptake is drastically inhibited. Chlorate was also able to induce reversion of nit − mutants of C. reinhardtii, but failed to produce His + revertants or Arar mutants in the BA-13 strain of Salmonella typhimurium. In contrast, chlorate treatment induced mutagenesis in strain E1F1 of the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. Genetic analyses of nitrate reductase-deficient CR mutants of C. reinhardtii revealed two types of CR, to low (1.5 mM) and high (15 mM) chlorate concentrations. These two traits were recessive in heterozygous diploids and segregated in genetic crosses independently of each other and of the nit-1 and nit-2 loci. Three her loci and four lcr loci mediating resistance to high (HC) and low (LC) concentrations of chlorate were identified. Mutations at the nit-2 locus, and deletions of a putative locus for nitrate transport were always epistatic to mutations responsible for resistance to either LC or HC. In both nit + and nit − chlorate-sensitive (CS) strains, nitrate and nitrite gave protection from the toxic effect of chlorate. Our data indicate that in C. reinhardtii chlorate toxicity is primarily dependent on the nitrate transport system and independent of the existence of an active NR enzyme. At least seven loci unrelated to the nitrate assimilation pathway and mediating CR are thought to control indirectly the efficiency of the nitrate transporter for chlorate transport. In addition, chlorate appears to be a mutagen capable of inducing a wide range of mutations unrelated to the nitrate assimilation pathway.
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