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Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast

Aneuploidy, referring here to genome contents characterized by abnormal numbers of chromosomes, has been associated with developmental defects, cancer, and adaptive evolution in experimental organisms1–9. However, it remains unresolved how aneuploidy impacts gene expression and whether aneuploidy co...

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Autores principales: Pavelka, Norman, Rancati, Giulia, Zhu, Jin, Bradford, William D., Saraf, Anita, Florens, Laurence, Sanderson, Brian W., Hattem, Gaye L., Li, Rong
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2978756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20962780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09529
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author Pavelka, Norman
Rancati, Giulia
Zhu, Jin
Bradford, William D.
Saraf, Anita
Florens, Laurence
Sanderson, Brian W.
Hattem, Gaye L.
Li, Rong
author_facet Pavelka, Norman
Rancati, Giulia
Zhu, Jin
Bradford, William D.
Saraf, Anita
Florens, Laurence
Sanderson, Brian W.
Hattem, Gaye L.
Li, Rong
author_sort Pavelka, Norman
collection PubMed
description Aneuploidy, referring here to genome contents characterized by abnormal numbers of chromosomes, has been associated with developmental defects, cancer, and adaptive evolution in experimental organisms1–9. However, it remains unresolved how aneuploidy impacts gene expression and whether aneuploidy could directly bring phenotypic variation and improved fitness over that of euploid counterparts. In this work, we designed a novel scheme to generate, through random meiotic segregation, 38 stable and fully isogenic aneuploid yeast strains with distinct karyotypes and genome contents between 1N and 3N without involving any genetic selection. Through phenotypic profiling under various growth conditions or in the presence of a panel of chemotherapeutic or antifungal drugs, we found that aneuploid strains exhibited diverse growth phenotypes, and some aneuploid strains grew better than euploid control strains under conditions suboptimal for the latter. Using quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we show that the levels of protein expression largely scale with chromosome copy numbers, following the same trend observed for the transcriptome. These results provide strong evidence that aneuploidy directly impacts gene expression at both the transcriptome and proteome levels and can generate significant phenotypic variation that could bring about fitness gains under diverse conditions. Our findings suggest that the fitness ranking between euploid and aneuploid cells is context- and karyotype-dependent, providing the basis for the notion that aneuploidy can directly underlie phenotypic evolution and cellular adaptation.
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spelling pubmed-29787562011-05-11 Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast Pavelka, Norman Rancati, Giulia Zhu, Jin Bradford, William D. Saraf, Anita Florens, Laurence Sanderson, Brian W. Hattem, Gaye L. Li, Rong Nature Article Aneuploidy, referring here to genome contents characterized by abnormal numbers of chromosomes, has been associated with developmental defects, cancer, and adaptive evolution in experimental organisms1–9. However, it remains unresolved how aneuploidy impacts gene expression and whether aneuploidy could directly bring phenotypic variation and improved fitness over that of euploid counterparts. In this work, we designed a novel scheme to generate, through random meiotic segregation, 38 stable and fully isogenic aneuploid yeast strains with distinct karyotypes and genome contents between 1N and 3N without involving any genetic selection. Through phenotypic profiling under various growth conditions or in the presence of a panel of chemotherapeutic or antifungal drugs, we found that aneuploid strains exhibited diverse growth phenotypes, and some aneuploid strains grew better than euploid control strains under conditions suboptimal for the latter. Using quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we show that the levels of protein expression largely scale with chromosome copy numbers, following the same trend observed for the transcriptome. These results provide strong evidence that aneuploidy directly impacts gene expression at both the transcriptome and proteome levels and can generate significant phenotypic variation that could bring about fitness gains under diverse conditions. Our findings suggest that the fitness ranking between euploid and aneuploid cells is context- and karyotype-dependent, providing the basis for the notion that aneuploidy can directly underlie phenotypic evolution and cellular adaptation. 2010-10-20 2010-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2978756/ /pubmed/20962780 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09529 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Pavelka, Norman
Rancati, Giulia
Zhu, Jin
Bradford, William D.
Saraf, Anita
Florens, Laurence
Sanderson, Brian W.
Hattem, Gaye L.
Li, Rong
Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title_full Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title_fullStr Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title_full_unstemmed Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title_short Aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
title_sort aneuploidy confers quantitative proteome changes and phenotypic variation in budding yeast
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2978756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20962780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09529
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