Abstract

The transport of glucose by spore-originated liquid cultures of Aspergillus nidulans varied with culture age. At early times after conidial inoculation, the uptake rate increases, reaches a maximum at about 11 hr, and subsequently declines exponentially. This decline in uptake rate with age is also observed for sucrose, fructose, alanine, and the nonmetabolizable glucose analog, 2-deoxyglucose. Conidiation of liquid-grown Aspergillus nidulans can be induced (by transfer to solid medium) only after a certain developmental stage, called competence, is attained. Two mutants, selected for precocious conidiation on solid medium, differ from wild-type and from each other in the rate of decline of glucose uptake with culture age: The rate of decline is inversely related to the time of conidiation. The precocious development of these mutants is due to a premature acquisition of competence rather than an acceleration of the events that follow induction. We postulate that an internal clock controls the time of acquisition of developmental competence and suggest that this clock is related to changes in a membrane transport system.

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