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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Karyotype engineering by chromosome fusion leads to reproductive isolation in yeast

Jingchuan Luo, +3 more
- 01 Aug 2018 - 
- Vol. 560, Iss: 7718, pp 392-396
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TLDR
Overall, budding yeast tolerates a reduction in chromosome number unexpectedly well, providing a striking example of the robustness of genomes to change.
Abstract
Extant species have wildly different numbers of chromosomes, even among taxa with relatively similar genome sizes (for example, insects)1,2. This is likely to reflect accidents of genome history, such as telomere–telomere fusions and genome duplication events3–5. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes, whereas other apes have 24. One human chromosome is a fusion product of the ancestral state6. This raises the question: how well can species tolerate a change in chromosome numbers without substantial changes to genome content? Many tools are used in chromosome engineering in Saccharomyces cerevisiae7–10, but CRISPR–Cas9-mediated genome editing facilitates the most aggressive engineering strategies. Here we successfully fused yeast chromosomes using CRISPR–Cas9, generating a near-isogenic series of strains with progressively fewer chromosomes ranging from sixteen to two. A strain carrying only two chromosomes of about six megabases each exhibited modest transcriptomic changes and grew without major defects. When we crossed a sixteen-chromosome strain with strains with fewer chromosomes, we noted two trends. As the number of chromosomes dropped below sixteen, spore viability decreased markedly, reaching less than 10% for twelve chromosomes. As the number of chromosomes decreased further, yeast sporulation was arrested: a cross between a sixteen-chromosome strain and an eight-chromosome strain showed greatly reduced full tetrad formation and less than 1% sporulation, from which no viable spores could be recovered. However, homotypic crosses between pairs of strains with eight, four or two chromosomes produced excellent sporulation and spore viability. These results indicate that eight chromosome–chromosome fusion events suffice to isolate strains reproductively. Overall, budding yeast tolerates a reduction in chromosome number unexpectedly well, providing a striking example of the robustness of genomes to change. Yeast chromosomes have been fused to produce viable strains with only two chromosomes that are reproductively isolated from the sixteen-chromosome wild type, but otherwise show high fitness in mitosis and meiosis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Creating a functional single-chromosome yeast

TL;DR: A functional single-chromosome yeast from a Saccharomyces cerevisiae haploid cell containing sixteen linear chromosomes is created by successive end-to-end chromosome fusions and centromere deletions to demonstrate an approach to exploration of eukaryote evolution with respect to chromosome structure and function.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Roadmap for Understanding the Evolutionary Significance of Structural Genomic Variation

TL;DR: How different types of SVs affect ecological and evolutionary processes are reviewed; unifying definitions and recommendations for future studies are suggested; and a roadmap for the integration of SV's in ecoevolutionary studies is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chromosome Conformation Capture and Beyond: Toward an Integrative View of Chromosome Structure and Function.

TL;DR: A review of chromosome conformation capture methods can be found in this paper, focusing on the contribution of complementary methodologies to our understanding of structures revealed by 3C methods and their biological implications and discuss the next technical and conceptual frontiers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Centromeres on Spatial Genome Architecture.

TL;DR: The structures and functions of centromeres in various organisms are shared beginning with the diversity of their DNA sequence anatomies and ultimately detail the different ways they contribute to genome organization and regulation at the spatial level.
References
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