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American Association for the Advancement of Science, Science, 6179(344), p. 55-58, 2014

DOI: 10.1126/science.1249252

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Total Synthesis of a Functional Designer Eukaryotic Chromosome

Journal article published in 2014 by Narayana Annaluru, Héloïse Muller, Leslie A. Mitchell, Sivaprakash Ramalingam, Giovanni Stracquadanio ORCID, Sarah M. Richardson ORCID, Jessica S. Dymond, Zheng Kuang, Lisa Z. Scheifele, Eric M. Cooper, Yizhi Cai, Karen Zeller, Neta Agmon, A. Ma, Jeffrey S. Han and other authors.
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Rapid advances in DNA synthesis techniques have made it possible to engineer viruses, biochemical pathways and assemble bacterial genomes. Here, we report the synthesis of a functional 272,871-base pair designer eukaryotic chromosome, synIII, which is based on the 316,617-base pair native Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome III. Changes to synIII include TAG/TAA stop-codon replacements, deletion of subtelomeric regions, introns, transfer RNAs, transposons, and silent mating loci as well as insertion of loxPsym sites to enable genome scrambling. SynIII is functional in S. cerevisiae. Scrambling of the chromosome in a heterozygous diploid reveals a large increase in a-mater derivatives resulting from loss of the MATα allele on synIII. The complete design and synthesis of synIII establishes S. cerevisiae as the basis for designer eukaryotic genome biology.