The Asian Age

1st single- chromosome yeast created

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Beijing, Aug. 3: Chinese scientists claimed to have created the first singlechro­mosome yeast while not affecting the majority of its functions, a breakthrou­gh that could help in furthering research related to aging and diseases in humans.

Brewer’s yeast, one- third of whose genome is said to share ancestry with humans, has 16 chromosome­s. However, Chinese scientists have managed to fit nearly all its genetic material into just one chromosome while not affecting the majority of its functions, according to a paper released on Thursday on the website of the journal Nature.

Qin Zhongjun, a molecular biologist at the Centre for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences of the Shanghai Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and his team used CRISPRCas9 genome- editing to create a single- chromosome yeast strain, staterun Xinhua news agency quoted the research paper as saying.

Yeast is a type of eukaryote, which also includes humans, plants, and animals. ■ Humans have 46 chromosome­s, whereas male jack jumper ants have just one. It seems that the number of chromosome­s of a eukaryote has no correlatio­n with the amount of genetic informatio­n they possess, the paper said. “Our research shows that all the genetic informatio­n can be concentrat­ed in just one chromosome,” Qin said.

In the past, researcher­s had fused two yeast chromosome­s together, but no one had ever performed the type of extreme genetic surgery that Qin and his colleagues set out to do several years ago.

Using the CRISPR- Cas9, Qin’s team removed the DNA at the telomeres, the ends of chromosome­s that protect them from degrading. They also snipped out the centromere­s, sequences in the middle that are important to DNA replicatio­n, the paper said.

First, they fused two chromosome­s, then joined this product to another chromosome, and repeated the process in successive rounds until there was only one chromosome left, it said. Despite the genetic clipping and restructur­ing, yeast with one “super- chromosome” is similar to natural yeast in cell growth and gene expression, Qin said. Qin suggested that the research provides a new approach to studying the functions of telomeres. — PTI

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