학술논문

The Mitochondrial Genome Impacts Respiration but Not Fermentation in Interspecific Saccharomyces Hybrids
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
PLoS ONE. September 23, 2013, Vol. 8 Issue 9, e75121
Subject
Parenting -- Physiological aspects
Fermentation -- Physiological aspects
Genes -- Physiological aspects
Genomics -- Physiological aspects
Mitochondrial DNA -- Physiological aspects
Health
Science and technology
Physiological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
In eukaryotes, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has high rate of nucleotide substitution leading to different mitochondrial haplotypes called mitotypes. However, the impact of mitochondrial genetic variant on phenotypic variation has been poorly considered in microorganisms because mtDNA encodes very few genes compared to nuclear DNA, and also because mitochondrial inheritance is not uniparental. Here we propose original material to unravel mitotype impact on phenotype: we produced interspecific hybrids between S. cerevisiae and S. uvarum species, using fully homozygous diploid parental strains. For two different interspecific crosses involving different parental strains, we recovered 10 independent hybrids per cross, and allowed mtDNA fixation after around 80 generations. We developed PCR-based markers for the rapid discrimination of S. cerevisiae and S. uvarum mitochondrial DNA. For both crosses, we were able to isolate fully isogenic hybrids at the nuclear level, yet possessing either S. cerevisiae mtDNA (Sc-mtDNA) or S. uvarum mtDNA (Su-mtDNA). Under fermentative conditions, the mitotype has no phenotypic impact on fermentation kinetics and products, which was expected since mtDNA are not necessary for fermentative metabolism. Alternatively, under respiratory conditions, hybrids with Sc-mtDNA have higher population growth performance, associated with higher respiratory rate. Indeed, far from the hypothesis that mtDNA variation is neutral, our work shows that mitochondrial polymorphism can have a strong impact on fitness components and hence on the evolutionary fate of the yeast populations. We hypothesize that under fermentative conditions, hybrids may fix stochastically one or the other mt-DNA, while respiratory environments may increase the probability to fix Sc-mtDNA.
Author(s): Warren Albertin 1,2, Telma da Silva 3, Michel Rigoulet 4,5, Benedicte Salin 4,5, Isabelle Masneuf-Pomarede 1,2, Dominique de Vienne 6, Delphine Sicard 6, Marina Bely 1, Philippe Marullo 1,7,* [...]