Induction of petite mutations during germination and outgrowth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospores.

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RESUMO

The germination and outgrowth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ascospores were studied by determining the sensitivity of the ascospores to the action of chemical mutagens. Survival of the ascospores after N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) treatment was low during the first 2 h of germination and then increased and remained constant. Survival of the ascospores after 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-[ethyl-2-chloroethyl]aminopropylamino)acridine-2HC1 (ICR-170) treatment was constant from 0 to 5 h, but as the ascospores completed outgrowth at 6 h they became more sensitive to killing by ICR-170. Survival of the ascospores remained high during treatment with 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-(3-[ethyl-2-hydroxyethyl]aminopropylamino)acridine-2HC1 (ICR-170-OH) or 2,7-diamino-10-ethyl-9-phenyl-phenanthridinium bromide. The main classes of mutations screened for were petites and auxotrophs. The induction of petites and auxotrophs by MNNG was independent of the stage of germination and outgrowth treated. Petite induction by ICR-170 was dependent upon the stage of germination and outgrowth treated. The early hours of germination (0 to 3 h) were not sensitive to petite induction. However, there was maximal petite induction at 5 h into germination and outgrowth, followed by a decline. During this same time period, ICR-170 induced less than 1% auxotrophic colonies. This finding is very unusual because ICR-170 induced 15% auxotrophic colonies in starved log-phase cultures of S. cerevisiae. The acridine ICR-170-OH induced no mutations during germination and outgrowth of the ascospores. Ethidium bromide induced petites, and the petite frequency became maximal at 5 h of germination and outgrowth, a result similar to that obtained with ICR-170.

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