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Large-scale genomic rearrangements boost SCRaMbLE inSaccharomyces cerevisiae

Authors :
Tianyi Li
Shijun Zhao
Li Cheng
Sha Hou
Zhouqing Luo
Jinsheng Xu
Wenfei Yu
Shuangying Jiang
Marco Monti
Daniel Schindler
Weimin Zhang
Chunhui Hou
Yingxin Ma
Yizhi Cai
Jef D. Boeke
Junbiao Dai
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

SummaryGenomic rearrangements contribute to gene copy number alterations, disruption of protein-coding sequences and/or perturbation of cis-regulatory networks. SCRaMbLE, a Cre/loxP-based system implanted in synthetic yeast chromosomes, can effectively introduce genomic rearrangements, and is thus a potential tool to study genomic rearrangements. However, the potential of SCRaMbLE to study genomic rearrangements is currently hindered, because a strain containing all 16 synthetic chromosomes is not yet available. Here, we constructed a yeast strain, SparLox83, containing 83 loxPsym sites distributed across all 16 chromosomes, with at least two sites per chromosome. Inducing Cre recombinase expression in SparLox83 produced versatile genome-wide genomic rearrangements, including inter-chromosomal events. Moreover, SCRaMbLE of the hetero-diploid strains derived from crossing SparLox83 with strains possessing synthetic chromosome III (synIII) from the Sc2.0 project led to increased diversity of genomic rearrangements and relatively faster evolution of traits compared to a strain with only synIII. Analysis of these evolved strains demonstrates that genomic rearrangements can perturb the transcriptome and 3D genome structure and can consequently impact phenotypes. In summary, a genome with sparsely distributed loxPsym sites can serve as a powerful tool to study the consequence of genomic rearrangements and help accelerate strain engineering in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........53fdfc80018dc80c3275879d5b359448