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1.
J Cell Biol ; 223(10)2024 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38935076

ABSTRACT

Aureobasidium pullulans is a ubiquitous polymorphic black yeast with industrial and agricultural applications. It has recently gained attention amongst cell biologists for its unconventional mode of proliferation in which multinucleate yeast cells make multiple buds within a single cell cycle. Here, we combine a chemical transformation method with genome-targeted homologous recombination to yield ∼60 transformants/µg of DNA in just 3 days. This protocol is simple, inexpensive, and requires no specialized equipment. We also describe vectors with codon-optimized green and red fluorescent proteins for A. pullulans and use these tools to explore novel cell biology. Quantitative imaging of a strain expressing cytosolic and nuclear markers showed that although the nuclear number varies considerably among cells of similar volume, total nuclear volume scales with cell volume over an impressive 70-fold size range. The protocols and tools described here expand the toolkit for A. pullulans biologists and will help researchers address the many other puzzles posed by this polyextremotolerant and morphologically plastic organism.


Subject(s)
Aureobasidium , Genetic Techniques , Transformation, Genetic , Aureobasidium/cytology , Aureobasidium/genetics , Aureobasidium/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Genetic Vectors/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Homologous Recombination , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Luminescent Proteins/metabolism , Red Fluorescent Protein
2.
Mol Biol Cell ; 35(4): br10, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38446617

ABSTRACT

Aureobasidium pullulans is a ubiquitous fungus with a wide variety of morphologies and growth modes including "typical" single-budding yeast, and interestingly, larger multinucleate yeast than can make multiple buds in a single cell cycle. The study of A. pullulans promises to uncover novel cell biology, but currently tools are lacking to achieve this goal. Here, we describe initial components of a cell biology toolkit for A. pullulans, which is used to express and image fluorescent probes for nuclei as well as components of the cytoskeleton. These tools allowed live-cell imaging of the multinucleate and multibudding cycles, revealing highly synchronous mitoses in multinucleate yeast that occur in a semiopen manner with an intact but permeable nuclear envelope. These findings open the door to using this ubiquitous polyextremotolerant fungus as a model for evolutionary cell biology.


Subject(s)
Ascomycota , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Ascomycota/metabolism , Aureobasidium , Cytoskeleton
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