Context-dependent neocentromere activity in synthetic yeast chromosome VIII

Pioneering advances in genome engineering, and specifically in genome writing, have revolutionized the field of synthetic biology, propelling us toward the creation of synthetic genomes. The Sc2.0 project aims to build the first fully synthetic eukaryotic organism by assembling the genome of . With...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell genomics 2023-11, Vol.3 (11), p.100437, Article 100437
Hauptverfasser: Lauer, Stephanie, Luo, Jingchuan, Lazar-Stefanita, Luciana, Zhang, Weimin, McCulloch, Laura H, Fanfani, Viola, Lobzaev, Evgenii, Haase, Max A B, Easo, Nicole, Zhao, Yu, Yu, Fangzhou, Cai, Jitong, Bader, Joel S, Stracquadanio, Giovanni, Boeke, Jef D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pioneering advances in genome engineering, and specifically in genome writing, have revolutionized the field of synthetic biology, propelling us toward the creation of synthetic genomes. The Sc2.0 project aims to build the first fully synthetic eukaryotic organism by assembling the genome of . With the completion of synthetic chromosome ( ) described here, this goal is within reach. In addition to writing the yeast genome, we sought to manipulate an essential functional element: the point centromere. By relocating the native centromere sequence to various positions along chromosome , we discovered that the minimal 118-bp sequence is insufficient for conferring chromosomal stability at ectopic locations. Expanding the transplanted sequence to include a small segment (∼500 bp) of the -proximal pericentromere improved chromosome stability, demonstrating that minimal centromeres display context-dependent functionality.
ISSN:2666-979X
2666-979X
DOI:10.1016/j.xgen.2023.100437