Abstract

To analyze the role of spermidine in cell growth and differentiation of Ustilago maydis, the gene encoding spermidine synthase (Spe) was isolated using PCR. We found that the enzyme is encoded by a chimeric bifunctional gene (Spe-Sdh) that also encodes saccharopine dehydrogenase (Sdh), an enzyme involved in lysine biosynthesis. The gene contains a 5' region encoding Spe, followed, without a termination signal or a second initiation codon, by a 3' region encoding Sdh, and directs the synthesis of a single transcript that hybridizes with 3' or 5' regions' probes of the gene. The gene could not be disrupted in a wild-type strain, but only in a mutant defective in the gene encoding ornithine decarboxylase (Odc). Single spe-sdh mutants were isolated after sexual recombination in planta with a compatible wild-type strain. Mutants were auxotrophic for lysine and spermidine, but not for putrescine, and contained putrescine and spermidine, but not spermine. Putrescine in double mutants is probably synthesized from spermidine by the concerted action of polyamine acetyl transferase and polyamine oxidase. spe-sdh mutants were sensitive to stress, unable to carry out the yeast-to-mycelium dimorphic transition, and showed attenuated virulence to maize. These phenotypic alterations were reverted by complementation with the wild-type gene.

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