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Series GSE3285 Query DataSets for GSE3285
Status Public on Sep 10, 2005
Title Characteristic genome rearrangements in experimental evolution
Organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Experiment type Genome variation profiling by array
Summary Genome rearrangements, especially amplifications and deletions, have regularly been observed as responses to sustained application of the same strong selective pressure in microbial populations growing in continuous culture. We studied eight strains of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) isolated after 100–500 generations of growth in glucose-limited chemostats. Changes in DNA copy number were assessed at single-gene resolution by using DNA microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization. Six of these evolved strains were aneuploid as the result of gross chromosomal rearrangements. Most of the aneuploid regions were the result of translocations, including three instances of a shared breakpoint on chromosome 14 immediately adjacent to CIT1, which encodes the citrate synthase that performs a key regulated step in the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Three strains had amplifications in a region of chromosome 4 that includes the high-affinity hexose transporters; one of these also had the aforementioned chromosome 14 break. Three strains had extensive overlapping deletions of the right arm of chromosome 15. Further analysis showed that each of these genome rearrangements was bounded by transposon-related sequences at the breakpoints. The observation of repeated, independent, but nevertheless very similar, chromosomal rearrangements in response to persistent selection of growing cells parallels the genome rearrangements that characteristically accompany tumor progression.
Set of arrays organized by shared biological context, such as organism, tumors types, processes, etc.
Keywords: Logical Set
 
Overall design Computed
Web link http://genome-www.stanford.edu/rearrangements/
 
Contributor(s) Dunham M
Citation(s) 12446845
Submission date Sep 09, 2005
Last update date Mar 16, 2012
Organization Stanford Microarray Database (SMD)
E-mail(s) array@genome.stanford.edu
Phone 650-498-6012
URL http://genome-www5.stanford.edu/
Department Stanford University, School of Medicine
Street address 300 Pasteur Drive
City Stanford
State/province CA
ZIP/Postal code 94305
Country USA
 
Platforms (3)
GPL2636 yB4
GPL2835 YB1
GPL2836 Florida
Samples (45)
GSM73805 E1.5A vs CP1AB genomic DNA
GSM73806 E1.6A vs. CP1AB genomic DNA
GSM73807 E1.1C vs CP1AB genomic DNA
Relations
BioProject PRJNA92947

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Supplementary data files not provided

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