Post-transcriptional mechanisms modulate the consequences of adaptive copy number variation
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ABSTRACT: Copy-number variants (CNVs) are large-scale amplifications or deletions of DNA that can drive rapid adaptive evolution and result in large-scale changes in gene expression. Whereas alterations in the copy number of one or more genes within a CNV can confer a selective advantage, other genes within a CNV can decrease fitness when their dosage is changed. Dosage compensation - in which the gene expression output from multiple gene copies is less than expected - is one means by which an organism can mitigate the fitness costs of deleterious gene amplification. Previous research has shown evidence for dosage compensation at both the transcriptional level and at the level of protein expression; however, the extent of compensation differs substantially between genes, strains, and studies. Here, we investigated sources of dosage compensation at multiple levels of gene expression regulation by defining the transcriptome, translatome and proteome of experimentally evolved yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) strains containing adaptive CNVs.
INSTRUMENT(S): Q Exactive
ORGANISM(S): Saccharomyces Cerevisiae (baker's Yeast)
SUBMITTER: Pieter Spealman
LAB HEAD: David Gresham
PROVIDER: PXD046587 | Pride | 2023-11-01
REPOSITORIES: Pride
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