Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131
2. Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A putative pheromone precursor gene of
Neurospora crassa
,
mfa-1
(which encodes mating factor
a
-1), was identified as the most abundant clone in starved mycelial and perithecial cDNA libraries. Northern analysis demonstrated high
mfa-1
expression in all mating type
a
tissues and suggested low expression levels in
mat A
tissues. The
mfa-1
gene was expressed as an approximately 1.2-kb transcript predicted to encode a 24-residue peptide, followed by a long 3′ untranslated region (3′ UTR). The predicted MFA1 sequence showed 100% sequence identity to PPG2 of
Sordaria macrospora
and structural similarity (a carboxy-terminal CAAX motif) to many hydrophobic fungal pheromone precursors. Mutants with a disrupted open reading frame (ORF) in which the critical cysteine residue had been changed to a nonprenylatable residue, tyrosine (YAAX mutants), were isolated, as were
mfa-1
mutants with intact ORFs but multiple mutations in the 3′ noncoding region (CAAX mutants). The 3′ UTR is required for the full range of
mfa-1
gene activity. Both classes of mutants showed delayed and reduced vegetative growth (which was suppressed by supplementation with a minute amount [30 μM] of ornithine, citrulline, or arginine), as well as aberrant sexual development. When crossed as female parents to wild-type males, the CAAX and YAAX mutants showed greatly reduced ascospore production. No ascospores were produced in homozygous
mfa-1
crosses. As males, YAAX
mat a
mutants were unable to attract wild-type
mat A
trichogynes (female-specific hyphae) or to initiate sexual development, while CAAX
mat a
mutants were able to mate and produce sexual progeny despite their inability to attract
mat A
trichogynes. In the
mat A
background, both CAAX and YAAX mutants showed normal male fertility but defective vegetative growth and aberrant female sexual development. Thus, the
mfa-1
gene appears to have multiple roles in
N. crassa
development: (i) it encodes a hydrophobic pheromone with a putative farnesylated and carboxymethylated C-terminal cysteine residue, required by
mat a
to attract trichogynes of
mat A
; (ii) it is involved in female sexual development and ascospore production in both mating types; and (iii) it functions in vegetative growth of both mating types.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
64 articles.
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