Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines

Although plants and animals are evolutionarily distant, the structure and function of their chromosomes are largely conserved. This allowed the establishment of a human-Arabidopsis hybrid cell line in which a neo-chromosome was formed by insertion of segments of Arabidopsis chromosomes into human ch...

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Main Authors: Liu, Yikun, Liaw, Yeng Mun, Teo, Chee How, Capal, Petr, Wada, Naoki, Fukui, Kiichi, Dolezel, Jaroslav, Ohmido, Nobuko
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Published: Nature Research 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/34034/
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spelling my.um.eprints.340342022-06-21T08:32:22Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/34034/ Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines Liu, Yikun Liaw, Yeng Mun Teo, Chee How Capal, Petr Wada, Naoki Fukui, Kiichi Dolezel, Jaroslav Ohmido, Nobuko Q Science (General) T Technology (General) Although plants and animals are evolutionarily distant, the structure and function of their chromosomes are largely conserved. This allowed the establishment of a human-Arabidopsis hybrid cell line in which a neo-chromosome was formed by insertion of segments of Arabidopsis chromosomes into human chromosome 15. We used this unique system to investigate how the introgressed part of a plant genome was maintained in human genetic background. The analysis of the neo-chromosome in 60- and 300-day-old cell cultures by next-generation sequencing and molecular cytogenetics suggested its origin by fusion of DNA fragments of different sizes from Arabidopsis chromosomes 2, 3, 4, and 5, which were randomly intermingled rather than joined end-to-end. The neo-chromosome harbored Arabidopsis centromeric repeats and terminal human telomeres. Arabidopsis centromere wasn't found to be functional. Most of the introgressed Arabidopsis DNA was eliminated during the culture, and the Arabidopsis genome in 300-day-old culture showed significant variation in copy number as compared with the copy number variation in the 60-day-old culture. Amplified Arabidopsis centromere DNA and satellite repeats were localized at particular loci and some fragments were inserted into various positions of human chromosome. Neo-chromosome reorganization and behavior in somatic cell hybrids between the plant and animal kingdoms are discussed. Nature Research 2021-03-30 Article PeerReviewed Liu, Yikun and Liaw, Yeng Mun and Teo, Chee How and Capal, Petr and Wada, Naoki and Fukui, Kiichi and Dolezel, Jaroslav and Ohmido, Nobuko (2021) Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines. Scientific Reports, 11 (1). ISSN 2045-2322, DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86130-4 <https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86130-4>. 10.1038/s41598-021-86130-4
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
T Technology (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
T Technology (General)
Liu, Yikun
Liaw, Yeng Mun
Teo, Chee How
Capal, Petr
Wada, Naoki
Fukui, Kiichi
Dolezel, Jaroslav
Ohmido, Nobuko
Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
description Although plants and animals are evolutionarily distant, the structure and function of their chromosomes are largely conserved. This allowed the establishment of a human-Arabidopsis hybrid cell line in which a neo-chromosome was formed by insertion of segments of Arabidopsis chromosomes into human chromosome 15. We used this unique system to investigate how the introgressed part of a plant genome was maintained in human genetic background. The analysis of the neo-chromosome in 60- and 300-day-old cell cultures by next-generation sequencing and molecular cytogenetics suggested its origin by fusion of DNA fragments of different sizes from Arabidopsis chromosomes 2, 3, 4, and 5, which were randomly intermingled rather than joined end-to-end. The neo-chromosome harbored Arabidopsis centromeric repeats and terminal human telomeres. Arabidopsis centromere wasn't found to be functional. Most of the introgressed Arabidopsis DNA was eliminated during the culture, and the Arabidopsis genome in 300-day-old culture showed significant variation in copy number as compared with the copy number variation in the 60-day-old culture. Amplified Arabidopsis centromere DNA and satellite repeats were localized at particular loci and some fragments were inserted into various positions of human chromosome. Neo-chromosome reorganization and behavior in somatic cell hybrids between the plant and animal kingdoms are discussed.
format Article
author Liu, Yikun
Liaw, Yeng Mun
Teo, Chee How
Capal, Petr
Wada, Naoki
Fukui, Kiichi
Dolezel, Jaroslav
Ohmido, Nobuko
author_facet Liu, Yikun
Liaw, Yeng Mun
Teo, Chee How
Capal, Petr
Wada, Naoki
Fukui, Kiichi
Dolezel, Jaroslav
Ohmido, Nobuko
author_sort Liu, Yikun
title Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
title_short Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
title_full Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
title_fullStr Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
title_full_unstemmed Molecular organization of recombinant human-Arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
title_sort molecular organization of recombinant human-arabidopsis chromosomes in hybrid cell lines
publisher Nature Research
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/34034/
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score 13.214268