Publication | Open Access
Transmission of mitochondrial and chloroplast genomes in crosses of Chlamydomonas.
150
Citations
22
References
1987
Year
Comparative GenomicsGeneticsChloroplast GenomesMolecular GeneticsGenomicsPhysical DifferencesPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyMitochondrial BiogenesisMitochondrial DnaProkaryotic SystemGenome StructureDna ReplicationGenetic VariationPhylogenomicsBiologyOrganelle GenomesNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMedicine
Physical differences between organelle genomes of the interfertile species Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Chlamydomonas smithii have been used to demonstrate that sexual zygotes transmit chloroplast and mitochondrial DNA from opposite mating types. Processes responsible can be separated functionally and genetically, although both are controlled by mating type. In vegetative diploids, chloroplast and mitochondrial genomes are transmitted biparentally, but a 1-kilobase insert present in the C. smithii mitochondrial genome spreads unidirectionally to all C. reinhardtii genomes in a manner reminiscent of the intron found in the mitochondrial 21S rRNA gene of omega + strains of yeast.
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