Meiotic recombination in Neurospora crassa: a model for the process in humans and other multicellular eukaryotes. Genes are shuffled by recombination during meiosis in the sexual cycle of higher organisms. This is best understood in yeast. Our findings show Neurospora recombination differs from yeast recombination. It is more tolerant of sequence mismatch, differs in the relative frequencies of gene conversion and crossing over, has frequently interrupted conversion tracts and has transacting ge ....Meiotic recombination in Neurospora crassa: a model for the process in humans and other multicellular eukaryotes. Genes are shuffled by recombination during meiosis in the sexual cycle of higher organisms. This is best understood in yeast. Our findings show Neurospora recombination differs from yeast recombination. It is more tolerant of sequence mismatch, differs in the relative frequencies of gene conversion and crossing over, has frequently interrupted conversion tracts and has transacting genes controlling recombination hotspot activity. We propose to genetically dissect Neurospora recombination which appears to be a closer model for recombination in humans and other higher eukaryotes, where understanding recombination can assist control of genetic disease, efficient breeding in agriculture and our understanding of evolution.Read moreRead less
Interactions Between Integrative Genomic Islands And Plasmids; Role In The Spread And Loss Of Antibiotic Resistance And Pathogenicity Determinants
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$776,465.00
Summary
Mobile elements that integrate into bacterial chromosomes at a specific site contribute pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance determinants to their bacterial host but only a few are able to move themselves into new hosts. Some plasmids and some elements can help certain others. In this project, genetic approaches will be used to investigate how plasmids and integrative elements help one another move into a new bacterium or compete with one another to stay in the same cell.