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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Current genetics 36 (1999), S. 275-281 
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Key wordsNeurospora ; Kalilo ; Plasmid ; mtDNA ; Heterokaryon
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract There are four different variants of the kalilo “family” of linear mitochondrial plasmids. This family is found in several heterothallic species and one pseudohomothallic species of Neurospora, as well as in one homothallic species of Gelasinospora. The mode of dispersal of these plasmids is not known. Horizontal transmission has proved difficult to demonstrate. Another possibility is transfer by introgression, and this is modelled in the present paper. We have used introgression and subsequent heterokaryosis to successfully transfer the LA-kalilo plasmid from a Haitian strain of Neurospora crassa to the standard Oak Ridge N. crassa background, the LA-kalilo plasmid from the pseudohomothallic Neurospora tetrasperma to N. crassa, and the kalilo plasmid from N. crassa to N. tetrasperma. Thus, introgression is shown to be a possible avenue of dispersal between species. The recipient strains were all senescent but the mechanism of this senescence is not known. It could be caused by the plasmids, but if so the mechanism is novel since plasmid/mtDNA junction fragments of the type found in the standard mode of mtDNA insertion could not be detected. However, mtDNA changes were observed in the senescent recipients.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0983
    Keywords: Key words Kalilo ; Plasmid ; Neurospora ; Mitochondria ; Senescence
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Kalilo is a linear 9-kb plasmid, isolated originally from Hawaiian strains of the heterothallic fungus Neurospora intermedia. Its properties include terminal inverted repeats, two ORFs coding for a presumptive DNA and an RNA polymerase, and the ability to cause senescence in its original host and in the closely related species Neurospora crassa. We have examined natural isolates alleged to contain plasmids homologous to kalilo. Most of these isolates do in fact contain plasmids with so close an identity to kalilo as to be certain relatives. We found a new case of kalilo in Neurospora tetrasperma from Moorea-Tahiti, and a new case of LA-kalilo (previously found only in N. tetrasperma) in N. crassa from Haiti. A previously unreported, substantially shorter, kalilo variant has been found in three geographically separate isolates of the heterothallic species Neurospora discreta. Therefore, if the previously reported kalilo variant from the genus Gelasinospora is included, in all there are four members of the kalilo plasmid family. The main differences between these plasmids are in the terminal inverted repeats (TIRs). The phylogeny of the TIR sequences is largely congruent with that of nuclear DNA in the species in which they are found, suggesting that the plasmids are related by vertical descent throughout the evolution of these species. However, there are two cases of a plasmid found in a heterothallic and a pseudohomothallic species in the same global area; these cases might have arisen from more recent horizontal transmission or introgression.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Molecular microbiology 46 (2002), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Deletion of the spermidine synthase gene in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans results in a strain, ΔspdA, which requires spermidine for growth and accumulates putrescine as the sole polyamine. Vegetative growth but not sporulation or sterigmatocystin production is observed when ΔspdA is grown on media supplemented with 0.05–0.10 mM exogenous spermidine. Supplementation of ΔspdA with ≥ 0.10 mM spermidine restores sterigmatocystin production and ≥ 0.50 mM spermidine produces a phenotype with denser asexual spore production and decreased radial hyphal growth compared with the wild type. ΔspdA spores germinate in unsupplemented media but germ tube growth ceases after 8 h upon which time the spores swell to approximately three times their normal diameter. Hyphal growth is resumed upon addition of 1.0 mM spermidine. Suppression of a G protein signalling pathway could not force asexual sporulation and sterigmatocystin production in ΔspdA strains grown in media lacking spermidine but could force both processes in ΔspdA strains supplemented with 0.05 mM spermidine. These results show that increasing levels of spermidine are required for the transitions from (i) germ tube to hyphal growth and (ii) hyphal growth to tissue differentiation and secondary metabolism. Suppression of G protein signalling can over-ride the spermidine requirement for the latter but not the former transition.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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