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J Bacteriol


Title:Mating pheromones of Saccharomyces kluyveri: pheromone interactions between Saccharomyces kluyveri and Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Author(s):McCullough J; Herskowitz I;
Address:
Journal Title:J Bacteriol
Year:1979
Volume:138
Issue:1
Page Number:146 - 154
DOI: 10.1128/jb.138.1.146-154.1979
ISSN/ISBN:0021-9193 (Print) 1098-5530 (Electronic) 0021-9193 (Linking)
Abstract:"Saccharomyces kluyveri is a heterothallic yeast with two allelic mating types denoted as a-k and alpha-k by analogy with Saccharomyces cerevisiae and from the work described here. S. kluyveri produces mating pheromones analogous to those of S. cerevisiae, but which appear to have different specificity. S. kluyveri thus differs from S. cerevisiae, Hansenula wingei, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe in that it exhibits both strong constitutive agglutination and mating pheromones. alpha-k cells produce a pheromone ('alpha-k-factor') which causes a-k cells to arrest in the G1 phase of the cell cycle and to undergo a morphological change. After a period of time dependent on the concentration of alpha-k-factor, cells exposed to the factor resume cell division. alpha-k-factor has no effect on a-k/alpha-k diploids or on alpha-k cells, but at high concentration does induce G1 arrest of S. cerevisiaea cells (a-c). a-k cells produce a pheromone ('a-k-factor') which causes alpha-k cells to exhibit a morphological change. In addition, a-k cells exhibit the Bar phenotype with respect to alpha-k-factor. Partially purified preparations of S. cerevisiae alpha-factor are more active in inducing G1 arrest of a-k cells than of a-c cells. A more purified preparation of alpha-c-factor is less active against a-k cells than a-c cells, suggesting that an additional factor (KRE, kluyveri response enhancer) may be lost during purification. Attempts to mate S. kluyveri and S. cerevisiae cells by prototroph selection and by cell-to-cell mating have been unsuccessful with all combinations of mating types. Thus, S. cerevisiae and S. kluyveri are incompatible for mating even though their pheromones exhibit some physiological cross-reaction"
Keywords:"*Crosses, Genetic Fungal Proteins/*physiology Peptides/*physiology Saccharomyces/genetics/*physiology Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics/*physiology Species Specificity;"
Notes:"MedlineMcCullough, J Herskowitz, I eng Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. 1979/04/01 J Bacteriol. 1979 Apr; 138(1):146-54. doi: 10.1128/jb.138.1.146-154.1979"

 
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