Abstract

A temperature-sensitive mutant of Neurospora crassa, with reduced levels of protein synthesis at 37°C, was used to identify some essential events in conidial germination. Conidia of mutant strain psi-1 were incubated for 2 hr at 37°C and then shifted to 20°C. Germination was inhibited at 37°C, but commenced after 1.5 hr at 20°C. Increases in aspartate transcarbamylase activity, cell wall synthesis, and nuclear number preceded germination. However, increases in glutamate dehydrogenase activity, amino acid uptake, and DNA synthesis were inhibited prior to germination. Although all of these events were correlated with germination in control cultures of the mutant at 20°C and of its parent strain at 20 and 37°C, some events were apparently not essential for germination. The requirement for aspartate transcarbamylase activity was demonstrated independently by the failure of strain pyr-3d (lacking the activity) to germinate in the absence of uridine. The dispensability of glutamate dehydrogenase activity and DNA synthesis for the germination of some conidia was verified by the germination of strain am-1 (lacking glutamate dehydrogenase activity) in the absence of glutamate and by the germination of the parent strain in the presence of hydroxyurea (an inhibitor of DNA synthesis). These findings identify some landmarks in germination which may be useful in further studies of the regulation of a developmental program. They also provide preliminary evidence that the resting conidia may contain nuclei arrested at different stages of their division cycle.

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