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Reversal or protection by light of the ethidium bromide induced petite mutation in yeast

✍ Scribed by Hixon, Sharon C. ;Burnham, A. Danzey ;Irons, Ricky L.


Publisher
Springer
Year
1979
Tongue
English
Weight
370 KB
Volume
169
Category
Article
ISSN
0026-8925

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✦ Synopsis


An intermediate in the ethidium bromide (EB) induced petite mutation pathway may be destabilized by daylight light to cause a reversion to the normal grande phenotype. Starved cells preincubated in the dark for up to 6 h with 100 microgram/ml EB could be reverted to grandes after one hour of light exposure, whereas similarly treated cells maintained in the dark expressed the petite mutation in more than 80 percent of the population. In addition, the production of petite mutants by EB in buffer could be prevented if cell suspensions were exposed to light immediately upon the addition of EB. Photoreversal of the EB-derived petite mutation in growing cells was less efficient presumably because the availability of an energy source caused a continuation of mutation events beyond the light revertible step to a non-reversible fixation of the mutation. Cells treated with EB in growth media at 4 degrees C were more responsive to light protection and reversal of the mutation. This may be due to the cold inhibition of an enzyme which comes into play beyond the light sensitive step in the mutation pathway.


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