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Design of a synthetic yeast genome.

Sarah M RichardsonLeslie A MitchellGiovanni StracquadanioKun YangJessica S DymondJames E DiCarloDongwon LeeCheng Lai Victor HuangSrinivasan ChandrasegaranYizhi CaiJef D BoekeJoel S Bader
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2017)
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.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • copy number
  • cell wall