Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells.
Copy-number variations (CNVs) constitute very common differences between individual humans and possibly all genomes and may therefore be important fuel for evolution, yet how they form remains elusive. In starving Escherichia coli, gene amplification is induced by stress, controlled by the general s...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2011-08-01
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Series: | PLoS Genetics |
Online Access: | http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161906?pdf=render |
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author | Dongxu Lin Ian B Gibson Jessica M Moore P C Thornton Suzanne M Leal P J Hastings |
author_facet | Dongxu Lin Ian B Gibson Jessica M Moore P C Thornton Suzanne M Leal P J Hastings |
author_sort | Dongxu Lin |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Copy-number variations (CNVs) constitute very common differences between individual humans and possibly all genomes and may therefore be important fuel for evolution, yet how they form remains elusive. In starving Escherichia coli, gene amplification is induced by stress, controlled by the general stress response. Amplification has been detected only encompassing genes that confer a growth advantage when amplified. We studied the structure of stress-induced gene amplification in starving cells in the Lac assay in Escherichia coli by array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), with polymerase chain reaction (pcr) and DNA sequencing to establish the structures generated. About 10% of 300 amplified isolates carried other chromosomal structural change in addition to amplification. Most of these were inversions and duplications associated with the amplification event. This complexity supports a mechanism similar to that seen in human non-recurrent copy number variants. We interpret these complex events in terms of repeated template switching during DNA replication. Importantly, we found a significant occurrence (6 out of 300) of chromosomal structural changes that were apparently not involved in the amplification event. These secondary changes were absent from 240 samples derived from starved cells not carrying amplification, suggesting that amplification happens in a differentiated subpopulation of stressed cells licensed for global chromosomal structural change and genomic instability. These data imply that chromosomal structural changes occur in bursts or showers of instability that may have the potential to drive rapid evolution. |
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issn | 1553-7390 1553-7404 |
language | English |
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publishDate | 2011-08-01 |
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spelling | doaj.art-69288f0ce99e4cb595cac6a16b8c96b62022-12-22T03:08:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042011-08-0178e100222310.1371/journal.pgen.1002223Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells.Dongxu LinIan B GibsonJessica M MooreP C ThorntonSuzanne M LealP J HastingsCopy-number variations (CNVs) constitute very common differences between individual humans and possibly all genomes and may therefore be important fuel for evolution, yet how they form remains elusive. In starving Escherichia coli, gene amplification is induced by stress, controlled by the general stress response. Amplification has been detected only encompassing genes that confer a growth advantage when amplified. We studied the structure of stress-induced gene amplification in starving cells in the Lac assay in Escherichia coli by array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), with polymerase chain reaction (pcr) and DNA sequencing to establish the structures generated. About 10% of 300 amplified isolates carried other chromosomal structural change in addition to amplification. Most of these were inversions and duplications associated with the amplification event. This complexity supports a mechanism similar to that seen in human non-recurrent copy number variants. We interpret these complex events in terms of repeated template switching during DNA replication. Importantly, we found a significant occurrence (6 out of 300) of chromosomal structural changes that were apparently not involved in the amplification event. These secondary changes were absent from 240 samples derived from starved cells not carrying amplification, suggesting that amplification happens in a differentiated subpopulation of stressed cells licensed for global chromosomal structural change and genomic instability. These data imply that chromosomal structural changes occur in bursts or showers of instability that may have the potential to drive rapid evolution.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161906?pdf=render |
spellingShingle | Dongxu Lin Ian B Gibson Jessica M Moore P C Thornton Suzanne M Leal P J Hastings Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. PLoS Genetics |
title | Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. |
title_full | Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. |
title_fullStr | Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. |
title_full_unstemmed | Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. |
title_short | Global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving Escherichia coli cells. |
title_sort | global chromosomal structural instability in a subpopulation of starving escherichia coli cells |
url | http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3161906?pdf=render |
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