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3D organization of synthetic and scrambled chromosomes
Author(s) -
Guillaume Mercy,
Julien Mozziconacci,
Vittore F. Scolari,
Kun Yang,
Guanghou Zhao,
Agnès Thierry,
Yisha Luo,
Leslie A. Mitchell,
Michael Shen,
Yue Shen,
Roy Walker,
Weimin Zhang,
Yi Wu,
ZeXiong Xie,
Zhouqing Luo,
Yizhi Cai,
Junbiao Dai,
Huanming Yang,
YingJin Yuan,
Jef D. Boeke,
Joel S. Bader,
Helöise Müller,
Romain Koszul
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aaf4597
Subject(s) - biology , genome , chromosome , genetics , synthetic biology , computational biology , gene , genomic organization
Although the design of the synthetic yeast genome Sc2.0 is highly conservative with respect to gene content, the deletion of several classes of repeated sequences and the introduction of thousands of designer changes may affect genome organization and potentially alter cellular functions. We report here the Hi-C-determined three-dimensional (3D) conformations of Sc2.0 chromosomes. The absence of repeats leads to a smoother contact pattern and more precisely tractable chromosome conformations, and the large-scale genomic organization is globally unaffected by the presence of synthetic chromosome(s). Two exceptions are synIII, which lacks the silent mating-type cassettes, and synXII, specifically when the ribosomal DNA is moved to another chromosome. We also exploit the contact maps to detect rearrangements induced in SCRaMbLE (synthetic chromosome rearrangement and modification by loxP -mediated evolution) strains.

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