A cosmid for selecting genes by complementation in Aspergillus nidulans: Selection of the developmentally regulated yA locus

  1. M. Melanie Yelton*,
  2. William E. Timberlake*,, and
  3. C. A. M. J. J. van den Hondel
  1. *Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
  2. Medical Biology Laboratory-TNO, P.O. Box 45, 2280 AA Rijswijk, The Netherlands

Abstract

We constructed a 9.9-kilobase cloning vector, designated pKBY2, for isolating genes by complementation of mutations in Aspergillus nidulans. pKBY2 contains the bacteriophage λ cos site, to permit in vitro assembly of phage particles; a bacterial origin of replication and genes for resistance to ampicillin and chloramphenicol, to permit propagation in Escherichia coli; the A. nidulans trpC + gene, to permit selection in Aspergillus; and a unique BamHI restriction site, to permit insertion of DNA fragments produced by digestion with restriction endonucleases BamHI, BglII, Mbo I, or Sau3A. We used this cosmid to form a quasirandom recombinant DNA library containing 35- to 40-kilobase DNA fragments from a wild-type strain of A. nidulans. DNA from this library transformed a yellow-spored (yA -) pabaA - trpC - Aspergillus strain (FGSC237) to trpC + at frequencies of approximately 10 transformants per μg of DNA. Three of approximately 1000 trpC + pabaA - colonies obtained were putative yA + transformants, because they produced wild-type (green) spores. DNA from each of the green-spored transformants contained pKBY2 sequences and DNA from two transformants transduced E. coli to ampicillin resistance following treatment in vitro with a λ packaging extract. The cosmids recovered in E. coli had similar restriction patterns and both yielded trpC + transformants of A. nidulans FGSC237, 85% of which produced green spores. Several lines of evidence indicate that the recovered cosmids contain a wild-type copy of the yA gene.

Footnotes

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