
doi: 10.1139/g82-080
pmid: 6303535
From a sample of 122 natural isolates of Neurospora intermedia collected recently from around the world, five variants had erratic stop-start growth patterns reminiscent of the phenotype of "stopper" laboratory extranuclear mutants of Neurospora crassa. Like laboratory isolated mutants, the natural "stopper" variants were sterile as protoperithecial parents and transmitted the variant growth phenotypes very inefficiently, if at all, as male parents. Heterokaryon tests could not be made because of strain incompatibilities. Four of the variants have mitochondrial cytochrome aa3and b deficiencies. These four variants are all defective in mitochondrial ribosome assembly and have abnormal ratios of large to small subunits. Restriction enzyme analyses revealed some similarity of N. intermedia to N. crassa mtDNA. One normal and four variant strains had additional DNA in comparison to a standard normal strain. Cumulatively, the results indicate that the genetic alterations which cause stopper phenotypes of these natural isolates of N. intermedia are of mitochondrial rather than nuclear origin.
Genetic Variation, RNA, Fungal, DNA Restriction Enzymes, DNA, Mitochondrial, Deoxyribonuclease EcoRI, Mitochondria, Neurospora, Oxygen Consumption, RNA, Ribosomal, Cytochromes, DNA, Fungal, Ribosomes, Crosses, Genetic
Genetic Variation, RNA, Fungal, DNA Restriction Enzymes, DNA, Mitochondrial, Deoxyribonuclease EcoRI, Mitochondria, Neurospora, Oxygen Consumption, RNA, Ribosomal, Cytochromes, DNA, Fungal, Ribosomes, Crosses, Genetic
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