Genetic analysis of signal transduction through light-induced protein phosphorylation in Neurospora crassa perithecia

1997 
We have previously demonstrated that blue light induces the phosphorylation of a 15-kDa protein in crude membrane fractions of Neurospora crassa mycelia. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a mutant ( psp; phosphorylation of small proteins) that is completely defective for phosphorylation of that protein, as assayed in both crude membrane and soluble fractions. This mutation defines a unique locus that maps to linkage group VR between al-3 and his-6. To elucidate the photobiological significance of the phosphorylation of the protein, we analyzed known photobiological phenomena and discovered that the positioning of beaks on the perithecia, defined as perithecial polarity, was light-dependent in the wild type. In the psp mutant, beaks were phototropic as in the wild type, but their position was random. In a wc-1 mutant, however, beaks were positioned at random and were not phototropic. Thus light-induced perithecial polarity and phototropism of perithecial beaks are controlled differently. A psp; wc-1 double mutant showed the same phenotype as that of wc-1 with respect to these two photomorphogenetic characters. These results indicate that the wc-1 gene is epistatic to psp in the light-signal transduction pathway that controls both phototropism and perithecial polarity.
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