Unlocking the functional potential of polyploid yeasts.
Simone MozzachiodiKristoffer KrogerusBrian GibsonAlain NicolasGianni LitiPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Breeding and domestication have generated widely exploited crops, animals and microbes. However, many Saccharomyces cerevisiae industrial strains have complex polyploid genomes and are sterile, preventing genetic improvement strategies based on breeding. Here, we present a strain improvement approach based on the budding yeasts' property to promote genetic recombination when meiosis is interrupted and cells return-to-mitotic-growth (RTG). We demonstrate that two unrelated sterile industrial strains with complex triploid and tetraploid genomes are RTG-competent and develop a visual screening for easy and high-throughput identification of recombined RTG clones based on colony phenotypes. Sequencing of the evolved clones reveal unprecedented levels of RTG-induced genome-wide recombination. We generate and extensively phenotype a RTG library and identify clones with superior biotechnological traits. Thus, we propose the RTG-framework as a fully non-GMO workflow to rapidly improve industrial yeasts that can be easily brought to the market.
Keyphrases
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- high throughput
- wastewater treatment
- heavy metals
- single cell
- escherichia coli
- copy number
- induced apoptosis
- dna damage
- dna repair
- multidrug resistant
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- risk assessment
- electronic health record
- oxidative stress
- cell proliferation
- human health