Regulation of yeast mating-type interconversion: feedback control of HO gene expression by the mating-type locus.

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RESUMO

The ultimate product of yeast mating-type interconversion is a stable a/alpha diploid cell. A haploid cell carrying the HO gene gives rise to a diploid cell in a two-step process: first, the cell switches mating type as a result of genetic rearrangement (cassette substitution) catalyzed by HO; then, cells of opposite type mate to form a/alpha diploids. Mating-type interconversion does not occur in a/alpha diploids despite the presence of the HO gene. We have identified a plasmid carrying the HO gene by screening a yeast clone bank (constructed in vector YEp13) for plasmids that allow mating-type switching by ho cells. The yeast segment responsible for mating-type interconversion integrates by homology at the ho locus, thus confirming that it carries HO. Using the HO gene as a probe, we find that strains with an active mating-type interconversion system produce HO RNA, whereas a/alpha HO/HO cells do not and that this inhibition requires products of both the MATa1 and MATa2 genes. Thus, mating-type interconversion does not occur in a/alpha HO/HO cells because the HO gene product is not synthesized. These results demonstrate the following: (i) The mating-type locus, proposed on genetic grounds to be a regulatory locus, controls expression of an unlinked gene (HO) at the level of RNA production. (ii) The HO gene is under negative feedback control: its expression is inhibited after successful completion of diploidization (formation of a/alpha diploids).

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