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Mode of vegetative reproduction of the bipolar budding yeast species Wickerhamomyces pijperi and related strains
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Metadata
Document Title
Mode of vegetative reproduction of the bipolar budding yeast species Wickerhamomyces pijperi and related strains
Author
Imanishi Y, Jindamorakot S, Limtong S, Nakase T
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); Kasetsart University
Type
Article
Source Title
MICROBIOLOGY-SGM
ISSN
1350-0872
Year
2009
Volume
155
Page
3142-3148
Open Access
Bronze
Publisher
MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI
10.1099/mic.0.029231-0
Format
Abstract
To clarify the budding pattern of Wickerhamomyces pijperi, the vegetative cells were observed by scanning electron microscopy. The cells grew by bipolar budding, but cells that budded from the shoulder of a mother cell were occasionally observed. We examined the cell morphology and phylogeny of five strains of Wickerhamomyces sp. isolated in Thailand as Well as seven W pijperi and three Wickerhamomyces sp. strains that were preserved in culture collections. Phylogenetic analysis based on three different nucleotide sequences (D1/D2 domain of 26S rDNA, the actin gene ACT1 and the elongation factor 2 gene EF2) indicated that all the strains belonged to the genus Wickerhamomyces and were neighbours of the type strain W pijperi NBRC 1290(T). The strains fell into two groups in this analysis. The budding patterns of the strains were carefully observed by staining the bud scars, and these patterns were categorized into three groups: types I-III. Type I included cells that grew by bipolar budding and formed multiple scars, type III included cells that grew by multilateral budding and formed a single scar, and type 11 included cells that exhibited a mixture of type I and type III patterns. Among the 15 strains, 12 strains, including W. pijperi NBRC 1290(T), mainly exhibited type I or type 11 budding patterns; these strains belonged to group 1 of the phylogenetic analysis. The remaining three strains, which belonged to group 2, exhibited either type II or type III patterns. Thus the phylogenetic relationship and budding patterns are related. Moreover, some cells also exhibited budding characteristics that were intermediate between bipolar and multilateral budding.
License
Copyright
Rights
SGM
Publication Source
WOS