Chromosome-level genome assembly and structural variant analysis of two laboratory yeast strains from the Peterhof Genetic Collection lineage

Author:

Barbitoff Yury A12ORCID,Matveenko Andrew G12,Matiiv Anton B12,Maksiutenko Evgeniia M13,Moskalenko Svetlana E13,Drozdova Polina B4ORCID,Polev Dmitrii E5,Beliavskaia Alexandra Y6,Danilov Lavrentii G1,Predeus Alexander V27,Zhouravleva Galina A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics and Biotechnology, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia

2. Bioinformatics Institute, St. Petersburg 197342, Russia

3. St. Petersburg Branch, Vavilov Institute of General Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia

4. Irkutsk State University, Irkutsk 630003, Russia

5. CerbaLab Ltd., St. Petersburg 199106, Russia

6. Department of Invertebrate Zoology, St. Petersburg State University, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia

7. University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK, L7 3EA

Abstract

Abstract Thousands of yeast genomes have been sequenced with both traditional and long-read technologies, and multiple observations about modes of genome evolution for both wild and laboratory strains have been drawn from these sequences. In our study, we applied Oxford Nanopore and Illumina technologies to assemble complete genomes of two widely used members of a distinct laboratory yeast lineage, the Peterhof Genetic Collection (PGC), and investigate the structural features of these genomes including transposable element content, copy number alterations, and structural rearrangements. We identified numerous notable structural differences between genomes of PGC strains and the reference S288C strain. We discovered a substantial enrichment of mid-length insertions and deletions within repetitive coding sequences, such as in the SCH9 gene or the NUP100 gene, with possible impact of these variants on protein amyloidogenicity. High contiguity of the final assemblies allowed us to trace back the history of reciprocal unbalanced translocations between chromosomes I, VIII, IX, XI, and XVI of the PGC strains. We show that formation of hybrid alleles of the FLO genes during such chromosomal rearrangements is likely responsible for the lack of invasive growth of yeast strains. Taken together, our results highlight important features of laboratory yeast strain evolution using the power of long-read sequencing.

Funder

State Research Program

RFBR grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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