Ongoing transposition in cell culture reveals the phylogeny of diverse Drosophila S2 sublines

Author:

Han Shunhua1ORCID,Dias Guilherme B12ORCID,Basting Preston J1ORCID,Nelson Michael G3ORCID,Patel Sanjai3ORCID,Marzo Mar3ORCID,Bergman Casey M12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Georgia , Athens, GA 30602, USA

2. Department of Genetics, University of Georgia , Athens, GA 30602, USA

3. Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester , Manchester M13 9PT, UK

Abstract

Abstract Cultured cells are widely used in molecular biology despite poor understanding of how cell line genomes change in vitro over time. Previous work has shown that Drosophila cultured cells have a higher transposable element content than whole flies, but whether this increase in transposable element content resulted from an initial burst of transposition during cell line establishment or ongoing transposition in cell culture remains unclear. Here, we sequenced the genomes of 25 sublines of Drosophila S2 cells and show that transposable element insertions provide abundant markers for the phylogenetic reconstruction of diverse sublines in a model animal cell culture system. DNA copy number evolution across S2 sublines revealed dramatically different patterns of genome organization that support the overall evolutionary history reconstructed using transposable element insertions. Analysis of transposable element insertion site occupancy and ancestral states support a model of ongoing transposition dominated by episodic activity of a small number of retrotransposon families. Our work demonstrates that substantial genome evolution occurs during long-term Drosophila cell culture, which may impact the reproducibility of experiments that do not control for subline identity.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

University of Georgia Research Education Award Traineeship

Human Frontier Science Program

University of Georgia Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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