Abstract
Porphyra yezoensis Ueda conchospore germlings (1–4-cell stages) were treated with N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) for inducing mutations. Three kinds of color-mutated gametophytic blades, which were composed of the mutated cells wholly, sectorially or spottedly, were obtained; and most of them were sectorially variegated blades. The highest frequency of these mutated blades was 1.3%. Four different pigmentation mutant strains were obtained by regenerating single cells and protoplasts that were enzymatically isolated from the mutated sectors of the sectorially variegated blades. The mutants were relatively stable in color in both gametophytic blade and conchocelis phases. In the two phases, each mutant strain showed characteristic differences in the in vivo absorption spectra, and had different pigment contents of major photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll a, phycoerythrin and phycocyanin) as compared with the wild-type and with each other. The gametophytic blades from the four mutant lines showed significant differences in growth and photosynthetic rates, when they were cultured in the same conditions. By crossing the mutant with the wild-type, it was found that the color phenotypes of two mutants reported above, were resulted from two mutations in different genes, respectively.
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