Neurospora mutants sensitive both to mutagens and to histidine

Curr Genet. 1984 Dec;9(1):65-74. doi: 10.1007/BF00396206.

Abstract

Previous work in this and other laboratories showed that histidine strongly inhibits growth of mutants at ten out of 20 known mutagen-sensitivity loci in Neurospora, and that nine of the histidine-sensitive mutants disturb meiosis when homozygous. These and other results suggested that histidine affects recombination or DNA repair. Current work with the histidine-sensitive mutant uvs-6 shows that it is also inhibited by several other metabolites but none of them is as effective as histidine. On minimal medium without histidine or other inhibitors, uvs-6 first grows normally, then slows drastically and begins stop-start growth. Conidia from stop-start uvs-6 mycelia produce rejuvenated cultures. The stop-start growth, UV-sensitivity, histidine-sensitivity, and recessive meiotic characters of uvs-6 segregated together in crosses, and reverted together. In tests on other mutagen-sensitive mutants, sensitivity to histidine was strongly correlated with stop-start growth and with sensitivity to other metabolites. Histidine induces premature stop-start growth in at least two mutants. Several possible explanations for the histidine-sensitivity have been excluded.