Abstract

White, pink, orange, and yellow strains ofUstilago violacea containing high and low levels of cytochrome c and various carotenes were exposed to ultraviolet light. The survival curves for all strains were of exponential decay form, but the carotene-accumulating strains were generally more resistant to UV than those strains with no carotenes at all. The UV exposure time leading to 90% loss in viability, LD90, was quantitatively related to the carotene content in the form of a power function, where LD90 increased as the fifth root of the total carotene content per cell. We also determined that the ratio of total carotenes to total cytochrome c per cell was quantitatively related to the rate of viability loss during UV exposure.

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