Developmental Defects Resulting from Arginine Auxotrophy in Aspergillus nidulans

1983 
Summary: A mutant of Aspergillus nidulans, isolated for inability to form asexual spores (conidia) on complete medium, was found to regain the ability to conidiate if the medium was supplemented with arginine On minimal medium the mutant required arginine for growth but at a much lower concentration than that required for conidiation. This mutant, designated argB12, thus defines a phase-critical gene, i.e. a gene whose function is in greater demand for development than for growth. In addition to its aconidial phenotype, the mutant also exhibited (depending on the medium) aberrant sexual development and a low efficiency of conidial germination. In crosses, each of these developmental phenotypes segregated with arginine auxotrophy. Genetic and biochemical analyses showed the argB12 mutation to be an allele of the previously described argB locus, mutants of which lack ornithine transcarbamylase. Arginine-requiring mutants at at least two other loci were also found to be defective in asexual sporulation, but the germination defect appears to be specific to argB mutants.
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