Studies of heterothallic and homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have led to the suggestion that mating-type information is located at three distinct sites on chromosome 3, although only information at the mating-type (MAT) locus is expressed (Hicks, Strathern and Herskowitz, 1977). We have found that the recessive mutation cmt permits expression of the normally silent copies of mating-type information at the HMa and HM alpha loci. In haploid strains carrying HMa and HM alpha, the cmt mutation allows the simultaneous expression of both a and alpha information, leading to a nonmating ("MATa/MAT alpha") phenotype. The effects of cmt can be masked by changing the mating-type information at HMa or HM alpha. For example, a cell of genotype MATa hma HM alpha cmt has an a mating type, while a MAT alpha hma HM alpha cmt strain is nonmating. Expression of mating-type information at the HM loci can correct the mating and sporulation defects of the mata* and mat alpha 10 alleles. Meiotic segregants recovered from cmt/cmt diploids carrying the mat mutations demonstrate that these mutants are not "healed" to normal MAT alleles, as is the case in parallel studies using the homothallism gene HO.--All of the results are consistent with the notion that the HMa and hm alpha alleles both code for alpha information, while HM alpha and hma both code for a information. The cmt mutation demonstrates that these normally silent copies of mating-type and sporulation information can be expressed and that the information at these loci is functionally equivalent to that found at MAT. The cmt mutation does not cause interconversions of mating-type alleles at MAT, and it is not genetically linked to MAT, HMa, HM alpha or HO. In cmt heterozygotes, cmt becomes homozygous at a frequency greater than 1% when the genotype at the MAT locus is mata*/MAT alpha or mat alpha 10/MATa.
[1]
I. Herskowitz,et al.
Interconversion of Yeast Mating Types I. Direct Observations of the Action of the Homothallism (HO) Gene.
,
1976,
Genetics.
[2]
Y. Kassir,et al.
Regulation of mating and meiosis in yeast by the mating-type region.
,
1976,
Genetics.
[3]
A K Hopper,et al.
Mating type and sporulation in yeast. I. Mutations which alter mating-type control over sporulation.
,
1975,
Genetics.
[4]
J. Haber.
Bisexual mating behavior in a diploid of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: evidence for genetically controlled non-random chromosome loss during vegetative growth.
,
1974,
Genetics.
[5]
Y. Nogi,et al.
The genetic system controlling homothallism in Saccharomyces yeasts.
,
1974,
Genetics.
[6]
D. Hawthorne.
A DELETION IN YEAST AND ITS BEARING ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE MATING TYPE LOCUS.
,
1963,
Genetics.