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A family of laboratory strains ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae carry rearrangements involving chromosomes I and III

✍ Scribed by Casaregola, Serge; Nguyen, Huu Vang; Lepingle, Andree; Brignon, Pierre; Gendre, François; Gaillardin, Claude


Book ID
101226349
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
182 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0749-503X

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✦ Synopsis


In order to study meiotic segregation of chromosome length polymorphism in yeast, we analysed the progeny of a cross involving two laboratory strains FL100trp and YNN295. Analysis of the parental strains led us to detect an important length polymorphism of chromosomes I and III in FL100trp. A reciprocal translocation involving 80 kb of the left arm of chromosome III and 45 kb of the right arm of chromosome I was shown to be the cause for the observed polymorphism in this strain. The characterization of the translocation breakpoints revealed the existence of a transposition hot-spot on chromosome I: the sequence of the translocation joints on chromosomes I and III suggests that the mechanism very likely involved homologous recombination between Ty2 transposable elements on each chromosome. Analysis of FL100, FL200 and FL100trp ura, which are related to FL100trp, shows that this reciprocal translocation is present in some of the strains of the FL series, whereas the parental strain FL100 does not carry the same rearrangement. We evidenced instead the duplication of 80 kb of chromosome III on chromosome I and a deletion of 45 kb of the right arm of chromosome I in this strain, indicating that secondary events might have taken place and that the strain currently named FL100 is not the common ancestor of the FL series.


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