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. 1984 Apr;47(4):710–714. doi: 10.1128/aem.47.4.710-714.1984

Isolation and Characterization of Vacuoles from the Ergot Fungus Claviceps purpurea

Ullrich Keller 1,*, Norbert Madry 1, Horst Kleinkauf 1, Konrad Glund 1,
PMCID: PMC239753  PMID: 16346510

Abstract

Protoplasts of Claviceps purpurea were prepared by treatment of mycelium with a lytic mixture of snail gut enzyme and cellulase from Trichoderma viride. Such protoplasts could be efficiently lysed by Triton X-100 treatment at high osmotic pressure without Ca2+ or Mg2+, allowing the release of intact vacuoles in high yields. Vacuoles obtained from cells grown in modified Vogel medium (vegetative-type cells not producing alkaloids) were isolated and purified by centrifugation from a 5% Ficoll 400 (wt/vol) phase into the interphase between two layers, one containing 0.25 M each of mannitol and sucrose, and one containing 0.5 M mannitol. Vacuoles derived from cells grown in a medium favoring ergot alkaloid synthesis (sclerotia-like cells) were isolated by gentle centrifugation of filtered protoplast lysates without addition of Ficoll 400. Biochemical analyses of the vacuole fraction isolated from either kind of cell revealed their function as compartments harboring several hydrolytic enzymes. However, the enrichment of free amino acids in vacuoles of sclerotia-like cells was less pronounced than that in vacuoles of vegetative-type cells, indicating a difference in metabolic compartmentation in the two types of cells.

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Selected References

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