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496


Design of a synthetic yeast genome

Richardson, Sarah M; Mitchell, Leslie A; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Yang, Kun; Dymond, Jessica S; DiCarlo, James E; Lee, Dongwon; Huang, Cheng Lai Victor; Chandrasegaran, Srinivasan; Cai, Yizhi; Boeke, Jef D; Bader, Joel S
We describe complete design of a synthetic eukaryotic genome, Sc2.0, a highly modified Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome reduced in size by nearly 8%, with 1.1 megabases of the synthetic genome deleted, inserted, or altered. Sc2.0 chromosome design was implemented with BioStudio, an open-source framework developed for eukaryotic genome design, which coordinates design modifications from nucleotide to genome scales and enforces version control to systematically track edits. To achieve complete Sc2.0 genome synthesis, individual synthetic chromosomes built by Sc2.0 Consortium teams around the world will be consolidated into a single strain by "endoreduplication intercross." Chemically synthesized genomes like Sc2.0 are fully customizable and allow experimentalists to ask otherwise intractable questions about chromosome structure, function, and evolution with a bottom-up design strategy.
PMID: 28280199
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2477422

3D organization of synthetic and scrambled chromosomes

Mercy, Guillaume; Mozziconacci, Julien; Scolari, Vittore F; Yang, Kun; Zhao, Guanghou; Thierry, Agnes; Luo, Yisha; Mitchell, Leslie A; Shen, Michael; Shen, Yue; Walker, Roy; Zhang, Weimin; Wu, Yi; Xie, Ze-Xiong; Luo, Zhouqing; Cai, Yizhi; Dai, Junbiao; Yang, Huanming; Yuan, Ying-Jin; Boeke, Jef D; Bader, Joel S; Muller, Heloise; Koszul, Romain
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.
PMCID:5679085
PMID: 28280150
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2477382

Synthesis, debugging, and effects of synthetic chromosome consolidation: synVI and beyond

Mitchell, Leslie A; Wang, Ann; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Kuang, Zheng; Wang, Xuya; Yang, Kun; Richardson, Sarah; Martin, J Andrew; Zhao, Yu; Walker, Roy; Luo, Yisha; Dai, Hongjiu; Dong, Kang; Tang, Zuojian; Yang, Yanling; Cai, Yizhi; Heguy, Adriana; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Fenyo, David; Dai, Junbiao; Bader, Joel S; Boeke, Jef D
We describe design, rapid assembly, and characterization of synthetic yeast Sc2.0 chromosome VI (synVI). A mitochondrial defect in the synVI strain mapped to synonymous coding changes within PRE4 (YFR050C), encoding an essential proteasome subunit; Sc2.0 coding changes reduced Pre4 protein accumulation by half. Completing Sc2.0 specifies consolidation of 16 synthetic chromosomes into a single strain. We investigated phenotypic, transcriptional, and proteomewide consequences of Sc2.0 chromosome consolidation in poly-synthetic strains. Another "bug" was discovered through proteomic analysis, associated with alteration of the HIS2 transcription start due to transfer RNA deletion and loxPsym site insertion. Despite extensive genetic alterations across 6% of the genome, no major global changes were detected in the poly-synthetic strain "omics" analyses. This work sets the stage for completion of a designer, synthetic eukaryotic genome.
PMID: 28280154
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2476892

"Perfect" designer chromosome V and behavior of a ring derivative

Xie, Ze-Xiong; Li, Bing-Zhi; Mitchell, Leslie A; Wu, Yi; Qi, Xin; Jin, Zhu; Jia, Bin; Wang, Xia; Zeng, Bo-Xuan; Liu, Hui-Min; Wu, Xiao-Le; Feng, Qi; Zhang, Wen-Zheng; Liu, Wei; Ding, Ming-Zhu; Li, Xia; Zhao, Guang-Rong; Qiao, Jian-Jun; Cheng, Jing-Sheng; Zhao, Meng; Kuang, Zheng; Wang, Xuya; Martin, J Andrew; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Yang, Kun; Bai, Xue; Zhao, Juan; Hu, Meng-Long; Lin, Qiu-Hui; Zhang, Wen-Qian; Shen, Ming-Hua; Chen, Si; Su, Wan; Wang, En-Xu; Guo, Rui; Zhai, Fang; Guo, Xue-Jiao; Du, Hao-Xing; Zhu, Jia-Qing; Song, Tian-Qing; Dai, Jun-Jun; Li, Fei-Fei; Jiang, Guo-Zhen; Han, Shi-Lei; Liu, Shi-Yang; Yu, Zhi-Chao; Yang, Xiao-Na; Chen, Ken; Hu, Cheng; Li, Da-Shuai; Jia, Nan; Liu, Yue; Wang, Lin-Ting; Wang, Su; Wei, Xiao-Tong; Fu, Mei-Qing; Qu, Lan-Meng; Xin, Si-Yu; Liu, Ting; Tian, Kai-Ren; Li, Xue-Nan; Zhang, Jin-Hua; Song, Li-Xiang; Liu, Jin-Gui; Lv, Jia-Fei; Xu, Hang; Tao, Ran; Wang, Yan; Zhang, Ting-Ting; Deng, Ye-Xuan; Wang, Yi-Ran; Li, Ting; Ye, Guang-Xin; Xu, Xiao-Ran; Xia, Zheng-Bao; Zhang, Wei; Yang, Shi-Lan; Liu, Yi-Lin; Ding, Wen-Qi; Liu, Zhen-Ning; Zhu, Jun-Qi; Liu, Ning-Zhi; Walker, Roy; Luo, Yisha; Wang, Yun; Shen, Yue; Yang, Huanming; Cai, Yizhi; Ma, Ping-Sheng; Zhang, Chun-Ting; Bader, Joel S; Boeke, Jef D; Yuan, Ying-Jin
Perfect matching of an assembled physical sequence to a specified designed sequence is crucial to verify design principles in genome synthesis. We designed and de novo synthesized 536,024-base pair chromosome synV in the "Build-A-Genome China" course. We corrected an initial isolate of synV to perfectly match the designed sequence using integrative cotransformation and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9)-mediated editing in 22 steps; synV strains exhibit high fitness under a variety of culture conditions, compared with that of wild-type V strains. A ring synV derivative was constructed, which is fully functional in Saccharomyces cerevisiae under all conditions tested and exhibits lower spore viability during meiosis. Ring synV chromosome can extends Sc2.0 design principles and provides a model with which to study genomic rearrangement, ring chromosome evolution, and human ring chromosome disorders.
PMID: 28280151
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 3150152

Bug mapping and fitness testing of chemically synthesized chromosome X

Wu, Yi; Li, Bing-Zhi; Zhao, Meng; Mitchell, Leslie A; Xie, Ze-Xiong; Lin, Qiu-Hui; Wang, Xia; Xiao, Wen-Hai; Wang, Ying; Zhou, Xiao; Liu, Hong; Li, Xia; Ding, Ming-Zhu; Liu, Duo; Zhang, Lu; Liu, Bao-Li; Wu, Xiao-Le; Li, Fei-Fei; Dong, Xiu-Tao; Jia, Bin; Zhang, Wen-Zheng; Jiang, Guo-Zhen; Liu, Yue; Bai, Xue; Song, Tian-Qing; Chen, Yan; Zhou, Si-Jie; Zhu, Rui-Ying; Gao, Feng; Kuang, Zheng; Wang, Xuya; Shen, Michael; Yang, Kun; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Richardson, Sarah M; Lin, Yicong; Wang, Lihui; Walker, Roy; Luo, Yisha; Ma, Ping-Sheng; Yang, Huanming; Cai, Yizhi; Dai, Junbiao; Bader, Joel S; Boeke, Jef D; Yuan, Ying-Jin
Debugging a genome sequence is imperative for successfully building a synthetic genome. As part of the effort to build a designer eukaryotic genome, yeast synthetic chromosome X (synX), designed as 707,459 base pairs, was synthesized chemically. SynX exhibited good fitness under a wide variety of conditions. A highly efficient mapping strategy called pooled PCRTag mapping (PoPM), which can be generalized to any watermarked synthetic chromosome, was developed to identify genetic alterations that affect cell fitness ("bugs"). A series of bugs were corrected that included a large region bearing complex amplifications, a growth defect mapping to a recoded sequence in FIP1, and a loxPsym site affecting promoter function of ATP2 PoPM is a powerful tool for synthetic yeast genome debugging and an efficient strategy for phenotype-genotype mapping.
PMCID:5679077
PMID: 28280152
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2477402

Engineering the ribosomal DNA in a megabase synthetic chromosome

Zhang, Weimin; Zhao, Guanghou; Luo, Zhouqing; Lin, Yicong; Wang, Lihui; Guo, Yakun; Wang, Ann; Jiang, Shuangying; Jiang, Qingwen; Gong, Jianhui; Wang, Yun; Hou, Sha; Huang, Jing; Li, Tianyi; Qin, Yiran; Dong, Junkai; Qin, Qin; Zhang, Jiaying; Zou, Xinzhi; He, Xi; Zhao, Li; Xiao, Yibo; Xu, Meng; Cheng, Erchao; Huang, Ning; Zhou, Tong; Shen, Yue; Walker, Roy; Luo, Yisha; Kuang, Zheng; Mitchell, Leslie A; Yang, Kun; Richardson, Sarah M; Wu, Yi; Li, Bing-Zhi; Yuan, Ying-Jin; Yang, Huanming; Lin, Jiwei; Chen, Guo-Qiang; Wu, Qingyu; Bader, Joel S; Cai, Yizhi; Boeke, Jef D; Dai, Junbiao
We designed and synthesized a 976,067-base pair linear chromosome, synXII, based on native chromosome XII in Saccharomyces cerevisiae SynXII was assembled using a two-step method, specified by successive megachunk integration and meiotic recombination-mediated assembly, producing a functional chromosome in S. cerevisiae. Minor growth defect "bugs" detected in synXII, caused by deletion of tRNA genes, were rescued by introducing an ectopic copy of a single tRNA gene. The ribosomal gene cluster (rDNA) on synXII was left intact during the assembly process and subsequently replaced by a modified rDNA unit used to regenerate rDNA at three distinct chromosomal locations. The signature sequences within rDNA, which can be used to determine species identity, were swapped to generate a Saccharomyces synXII strain that would be identified as Saccharomyces bayanus by standard DNA barcoding procedures.
PMID: 28280149
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2477372

Deep functional analysis of synII, a 770-kilobase synthetic yeast chromosome

Shen, Yue; Wang, Yun; Chen, Tai; Gao, Feng; Gong, Jianhui; Abramczyk, Dariusz; Walker, Roy; Zhao, Hongcui; Chen, Shihong; Liu, Wei; Luo, Yisha; Muller, Carolin A; Paul-Dubois-Taine, Adrien; Alver, Bonnie; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Mitchell, Leslie A; Luo, Zhouqing; Fan, Yanqun; Zhou, Baojin; Wen, Bo; Tan, Fengji; Wang, Yujia; Zi, Jin; Xie, Zexiong; Li, Bingzhi; Yang, Kun; Richardson, Sarah M; Jiang, Hui; French, Christopher E; Nieduszynski, Conrad A; Koszul, Romain; Marston, Adele L; Yuan, Yingjin; Wang, Jian; Bader, Joel S; Dai, Junbiao; Boeke, Jef D; Xu, Xun; Cai, Yizhi; Yang, Huanming
Here, we report the successful design, construction, and characterization of a 770-kilobase synthetic yeast chromosome II (synII). Our study incorporates characterization at multiple levels-including phenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, chromosome segregation, and replication analysis-to provide a thorough and comprehensive analysis of a synthetic chromosome. Our Trans-Omics analyses reveal a modest but potentially relevant pervasive up-regulation of translational machinery observed in synII, mainly caused by the deletion of 13 transfer RNAs. By both complementation assays and SCRaMbLE (synthetic chromosome rearrangement and modification by loxP-mediated evolution), we targeted and debugged the origin of a growth defect at 37 degrees C in glycerol medium, which is related to misregulation of the high-osmolarity glycerol response. Despite the subtle differences, the synII strain shows highly consistent biological processes comparable to the native strain.
PMCID:5390853
PMID: 28280153
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2477412

Whole genome synthesis: from poliovirus to synthetic yeast

Dai, Junbiao; Cai, Yizhi; Yuan, Yinjing; Yang, Huanming; Boeke, Jef D.
SCOPUS:85042695700
ISSN: 2095-4689
CID: 3030842

Low escape-rate genome safeguards with minimal molecular perturbation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Agmon, Neta; Tang, Zuojian; Yang, Kun; Sutter, Ben; Ikushima, Shigehito; Cai, Yizhi; Caravelli, Katrina; Martin, James A; Sun, Xiaoji; Choi, Woo Jin; Zhang, Allen; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Hao, Haiping; Tu, Benjamin P; Fenyo, David; Bader, Joel S; Boeke, Jef D
As the use of synthetic biology both in industry and in academia grows, there is an increasing need to ensure biocontainment. There is growing interest in engineering bacterial- and yeast-based safeguard (SG) strains. First-generation SGs were based on metabolic auxotrophy; however, the risk of cross-feeding and the cost of growth-controlling nutrients led researchers to look for other avenues. Recent strategies include bacteria engineered to be dependent on nonnatural amino acids and yeast SG strains that have both transcriptional- and recombinational-based biocontainment. We describe improving yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae-based transcriptional SG strains, which have near-WT fitness, the lowest possible escape rate, and nanomolar ligands controlling growth. We screened a library of essential genes, as well as the best-performing promoter and terminators, yielding the best SG strains in yeast. The best constructs were fine-tuned, resulting in two tightly controlled inducible systems. In addition, for potential use in the prevention of industrial espionage, we screened an array of possible "decoy molecules" that can be used to mask any proprietary supplement to the SG strain, with minimal effect on strain fitness.
PMCID:5338387
PMID: 28174266
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2437072

A high throughput mutagenic analysis of yeast sumo structure and function

Newman, Heather A; Meluh, Pamela B; Lu, Jian; Vidal, Jeremy; Carson, Caryn; Lagesse, Elizabeth; Gray, Jeffrey J; Boeke, Jef D; Matunis, Michael J
Sumoylation regulates a wide range of essential cellular functions through diverse mechanisms that remain to be fully understood. Using S. cerevisiae, a model organism with a single essential SUMO gene (SMT3), we developed a library of >250 mutant strains with single or multiple amino acid substitutions of surface or core residues in the Smt3 protein. By screening this library using plate-based assays, we have generated a comprehensive structure-function based map of Smt3, revealing essential amino acid residues and residues critical for function under a variety of genotoxic and proteotoxic stress conditions. Functionally important residues mapped to surfaces affecting Smt3 precursor processing and deconjugation from protein substrates, covalent conjugation to protein substrates, and non-covalent interactions with E3 ligases and downstream effector proteins containing SUMO-interacting motifs. Lysine residues potentially involved in formation of polymeric chains were also investigated, revealing critical roles for polymeric chains, but redundancy in specific chain linkages. Collectively, our findings provide important insights into the molecular basis of signaling through sumoylation. Moreover, the library of Smt3 mutants represents a valuable resource for further exploring the functions of sumoylation in cellular stress response and other SUMO-dependent pathways.
PMCID:5319795
PMID: 28166236
ISSN: 1553-7404
CID: 2491912