Differences in spontaneous mutation frequencies as a function of environmental stress in soil fungi at "Evolution Canyon," Israel

被引:25
作者
Lamb, Bernard C. [2 ]
Mandaokar, Snehal [2 ]
Bahsoun, Basma [2 ]
Grishkan, Isabella [1 ]
Nevo, Eviatar [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Haifa, Inst Evolut, IL-31905 Haifa, Israel
[2] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Div Biol, London SW7 2AZ, England
关键词
adaptation; Aspergillus niger; mutation rates; Penicillium lanosum;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0801995105
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
When various wild strains of Penicillium lanosum and Aspergillus niger were placed in the same mild laboratory environment, their frequencies of new spontaneous mutations were clearly related to whether they had been isolated from a region of high or low microclimatic stress. In the mild environment, the total frequencies of conidial color and morphological mutations in P. lanosum, summed over all relevant loci, ranged from 0.29% to 2.4% for six strains from the north-facing, less stressful "European" slope (ES/NFS) of "Evolution Canyon" 1, compared with 6.5-11.6% for five strains from the south-facing "African" slope (AS/SFS), which is a much more stressful environment, being harsher, drier, more fluctuating in temperature, and receiving up to eight times more UV radiation than the opposite slope. The corresponding figures for A. niger were 0.42-1.50% for three strains from the ES/NFS and 2.3-4.9% for six strains from the AS/SFS. The more mutagenic environment of the AS/SFS than of the ES/NFS means that, in Evolution Canyon, the mutation frequency differences between the very stressful environment and the less stressful environment are probably even larger than the 4- and 6-fold differences found here in a mild laboratory environment. The evidence from these two filamentous fungi, which have no sexual cycle, is that there are inherited differences in spontaneous mutation rates according to the levels of stress in the environment, and this feature may well be adaptive. Evolution Canyon I is at Nahal Oren, Mount Carmel, Israel.
引用
收藏
页码:5792 / 5796
页数:5
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]   INTERPRETATION OF UV-SURVIVAL CURVES OF ASPERGILLUS CONIDIOSPORES [J].
BOS, CJ ;
STAM, P ;
VANDERVEEN, JH .
MUTATION RESEARCH, 1988, 197 (01) :67-75
[2]   GENETIC-ANALYSIS AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF MASTER STRAINS FOR ASSIGNMENT OF GENES TO 6 LINKAGE GROUPS IN ASPERGILLUS-NIGER [J].
BOS, CJ ;
DEBETS, AJM ;
SWART, K ;
HUYBERS, A ;
KOBUS, G ;
SLAKHORST, SM .
CURRENT GENETICS, 1988, 14 (05) :437-443
[3]  
Davet P., 2000, Detection and Isolation of Soil Fungi
[4]  
Debets AJM, 1998, MOLECULAR VARIABILITY OF FUNGAL PATHOGENS, P41
[5]   GENETIC MAPS OF 8 LINKAGE GROUPS OF ASPERGILLUS-NIGER BASED ON MITOTIC MAPPING [J].
DEBETS, F ;
SWART, K ;
HOEKSTRA, RF ;
BOS, CJ .
CURRENT GENETICS, 1993, 23 (01) :47-53
[6]  
Domsch K.H., 1980, COMPENDIUM SOIL FUNG, VI
[7]  
Ellanskaya IA, 1997, MICROBIOS, V92, P19
[8]   The Aspergillus nidulans npkA gene encodes a Cdc2-related kinase that genetically interacts with the UvsBATR kinase [J].
Fagundes, MRVZK ;
Lima, JF ;
Savoldi, M ;
Malavazi, I ;
Larson, RE ;
Goldman, MHS ;
Goldman, GH .
GENETICS, 2004, 167 (04) :1629-1641
[9]   Aspergillus nidulans as a model system to characterize the DNA damage response in eukaryotes [J].
Goldman, GH ;
Kafer, E .
FUNGAL GENETICS AND BIOLOGY, 2004, 41 (04) :428-442
[10]  
GOLDMAN GH, 2007, ASPERGILLI