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Series GSE17578 Query DataSets for GSE17578
Status Public on Aug 12, 2009
Title A Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain widely used in bioethanol production
Organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Summary In the search for renewable sources of energy, bioethanol stands out as a benchmark biofuel because its production is based on a proven technological platform. Bioethanol is produced mainly from the fermentation of carbohydrates derived from agricultural feedstocks by the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. One of the most widely adopted strains is PE-2, a heterothallic diploid naturally adapted to the sugar cane fermentation process used in Brazil. Here we report the molecular genetic analysis of a PE-2 derived diploid (JAY270), and the complete genome sequence of a haploid derivative (JAY291). The JAY270 genome is highly heterozygous (~2 SNPs per kilobase), and has several structural polymorphisms between homologous chromosomes. These chromosomal rearrangements are confined to the peripheral regions of the chromosomes, and appear to reflect ectopic homologous recombination between repetitive DNA sequences. Despite the complex karyotype of JAY270, this diploid, when sporulated, had a high frequency of viable spores (~93%). Crosses of haploids derived from JAY270 to a haploid of the unrelated laboratory strain S288c also resulted in diploids that had good spore viability (75-95%). Thus, the rearrangements that exist near the ends of chromosomes do not impair meiosis and spore viability, as they do not span regions that contain essential genes. This observation is consistent with a model in which the peripheral regions of chromosomes represent plastic domains of the genome that are free to recombine ectopically and experiment with alternative structures that may be associated with a fitness benefit. We also explore features of the JAY270 and JAY291 genomes that help explain their high adaptation to industrial environments, exhibiting desirable phenotypes such as high cell mass production and fermentation kinetics, high temperature growth and oxidative stress tolerance. The genomic manipulation of such strains could enable the creation a new generation of industrial organisms, ideally suited for use as delivery vehicles for future bioenergy technologies.
 
Overall design This microarray experiment was used to compare the relative gene expression levels between two unrelated S. cerevisiae strain backgrounds: JAY270 and JAY309. Total RNA from each strain was prepared and used to synthesize differentially labeled cDNAs (Cy5 and C3 respectively). A positive Log2 (Red/Green) ratio indicates transcripts more abundant in JAY270, while a negative Log2 (Red/Green) ration indicates transcripts more abundant in JAY309.
 
Contributor(s) Argueso JL
Citation(s) 19812109
Submission date Aug 10, 2009
Last update date Mar 21, 2012
Contact name Juan Lucas Argueso
E-mail(s) lucas.argueso@duke.edu
Phone 1-919-684-5814
Organization name Duke University Medical Center
Department Molecular Genetics and Microbiology
Street address 371 CARL Building, Box 3054
City Durham
State/province SP
ZIP/Postal code 27710
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL4414 Lieb Lab at UNC-CH_Yeast Whole-genome Array (PCR-based)_for Buck MJ et al.
Samples (3)
GSM438014 JAY270 x JAY309 biorep A
GSM438016 JAY270 x JAY309 biorep B
GSM438017 JAY270 x JAY309 biorep C
Relations
BioProject PRJNA118679

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Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE17578_RAW.tar 4.6 Mb (http)(custom) TAR (of GPR)
Processed data included within Sample table

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