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The cytology of Aspergillus nidulans
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 April 2009
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In haploid strains of Aspergillus nidulans, asci arise from croziers. The two nuclei of the young ascus (the penultimate cell of the crozier) fuse, and the zygote nucleus immediately undergoes meiosis. At diakinesis and first metaphase eight bivalents are seen: three large (one, Chromosome 2, with a satellite), two medium sized (Chromosomes 4 and 5), two small (Chromosomes 6 and 7) and one very small (Chromosome 8). The perithecia of haploid strains are packed with asci and have very few sterile hyphae.
Diploid strains (heterozygotes made by Roper's technique) are very different from haploids in that the perithecia contain many sterile hyphae with little cytoplasm and coiled hyphae with dense cytoplasm made up mainly of uninucleate cells, and there are few asci in a perithecium. Croziers are absent: some of the cells of the coiled hyphae become asci. At diakinesis and first metaphase, the same chromosome configurations are seen as in a cross between the haploid strains from which the diploid was synthesized; the chromosomes are bivalents. The young ascus thus has a single (diploid) nucleus which undergoes meiosis, and asci develop apogamously. No evidence of nuclear fusion in the young ascus and of a tetraploid meiosis was obtained. Cultures from ascopores isolated by micro-manipulation from perithecia of diploids were all haploid. Meiosis appears to proceed normally to first metaphase, but typical later stages, and asci with spores, are rarely seen. First anaphase frequently fails to occur, and the chromosomes clump together.
In the strain ad2 y, obtained from a normal strain by X-irradiation, nine bivalents are present, one a very small fragment. In crosses between ad2 y and a normal strain, and in a diploid made from them, the fragment pairs with Chromosome 6. Asci in the cross between ad2 y and a normal haploid are highly irregular, often with less than the usual eight spores.
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