Yeast cells can stably exist in either a diploid or a haploid form. Both haploid and diploid yeast cells reproduce by
mitosis, in which daughter cells bud from mother cells. Haploid cells are capable of mating with other haploid cells of the opposite mating type (an
a cell can only mate with an α cell and vice versa) to produce a stable diploid cell. Diploid cells, usually upon facing stressful conditions like nutrient depletion, can undergo
meiosis to produce four haploid
spores: two
a spores and two α spores.
Differences between a and α cells a cells produce
a-factor, a mating
pheromone which signals the presence of an
a cell to neighbouring α cells.
a cells respond to α-factor, the α cell mating pheromone, by growing a projection (known as a shmoo, due to its distinctive shape resembling the
Al Capp cartoon character
Shmoo) towards the source of α-factor. Similarly, α cells produce α-factor, and respond to
a-factor by growing a projection towards the source of the pheromone. The selective response of haploid cells to the mating pheromones of the opposite mating type allows mating between
a and α cells, but not between cells of the same mating type. These
phenotypic differences between
a and α cells are due to a different set of
genes being actively
transcribed and repressed in cells of the two mating types.
a cells activate genes which produce
a-factor and produce a
cell surface receptor (Ste2) which binds to α-factor and triggers
signaling within the cell.
a cells also repress the genes associated with being an α cell. Conversely, α cells activate genes which produce α-factor and produce a cell surface receptor (Ste3) which binds and responds to
a-factor, and α cells repress the genes associated with being an
a cell.
MAT locus The different sets of transcriptional repression and activation, which characterize
a and α cells, are caused by the presence of one of two
alleles for a
mating-type locus called
MAT:
MATa or
MATα located on chromosome III. The
MAT locus is usually divided into five regions (W, X, Y, Z1, and Z2) based on the sequences shared among the two mating types. The difference lie in the Y region (Y
a and Yα), which contains most of the genes and promoters.
Diploid cells do not produce or respond to either mating pheromone and do not mate, but they can undergo
meiosis to produce four haploid cells. Like the differences between haploid
a and α cells, different patterns of gene repression and activation are responsible for the
phenotypic differences between haploid and diploid cells. In addition to the transcriptional patterns of
a and α cells, haploid cells of both mating types share a haploid transcriptional pattern which activates haploid-specific genes (such as
HO) and represses diploid-specific genes (such as
IME1). Conversely, diploid cells activate diploid-specific genes and repress haploid-specific genes. The different gene expression patterns of haploid and diploid cells are attributable to the
MAT locus. Haploid cells only contain one copy of each of the 16
chromosomes and therefore only possess one
MAT allele (either
MATa or
MATα), which determines their mating type. Diploid cells result from the mating of an
a cell and an α cell, and they possess 32 chromosomes (in 16 pairs), including one chromosome bearing the
MATa allele and another chromosome bearing the
MATα allele. The combination of the information encoded by the
MATa allele (the
a1 gene) and the
MATα allele (the α1 and α2 genes) triggers the diploid transcriptional program. Conversely, the presence of only one
MAT allele, either
MATa or
MATα, triggers the haploid transcriptional program. The cell will not produce or respond to mating pheromones, and when starved, the cell will unsuccessfully attempt to undergo meiosis with fatal results.
a-like faker cells α cells with inactivated
α1 and
α2 genes at the
MAT locus will exhibit the mating behavior of
a cells. When an
a-like faker (alf) cell mates with an α cell, they form a diploid cell lacking an active copy of the
a1 gene. As a result, these diploid cells cannot form the
a1-α2
protein complex needed to repress haploid-specific genes. This diploid cell will act like a haploid α cell, producing α pheromones to mate with an
a haploid cell, resulting in
aneuploidy. Since α cells do not ordinarily mate with each other, the presence of
a-like faker cells in a population of α cells can be detected in an
a-like faker assay. This test exposes the
MATα population, which lacks an active copy of the
HIS3 gene, to a tester strain like YPH316 yeast, which lack a
HIS1 gene, on
YEPD agar. After transferring the pairs of yeast strains onto
Sabouraud agar, only those that formed diploid cells by having
a-like faker cells mate with the tester strain will be capable of synthesizing the
amino acid histidine to survive. The extent of
chromosome instability can be inferred from the proportion of surviving pairs since
a-like faker cells naturally arise from damage to Chromosome III in yeast cells. ==Decision to mate==