De novo biological engineering of a tRNA neochromosome in yeast
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Abstract
Advances in DNA synthesis technology have led to rapid growth in the field of synthetic biology,
heralding a nascent era of synthetic genomics. Sc2.0 (Saccharomyces cerevisiae version 2.0) is an
international consortium with the aim of designing and constructing a fully‐synthetic eukaryotic
genome. Fundamental design changes to the synthetic genome include the removal of unstable
tRNA genes and their intended collation onto a “tRNA neochromosome”, with the aim of
producing a more robust and stable synthetic genome structure. To maintain viability of a
synthetic yeast, the tRNA neochromosome is therefore considered an important if not essential
aspect of this project.
The application of engineering principles is synonymous with synthetic biology, regularly
employing the recursive Design‐Build‐Test cycle to improve experimental approach. This
doctoral study explores the design, construction and characterisation of a tRNA neochromosome
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A series of design principles influenced by engineering concepts
were used to rationalise the complexities of de novo chromosome engineering, maximise its
stability and ensure function in vivo. A methodology based on in vivo homologous recombination
was then developed and shown to reliably construct the neochromosome from its constituent
parts. Experimental characterisation revealed that genetic elements function as expected, and
that the parental strain can tolerate the sole presence of one each of three single‐copy, essential
tRNA genes (SUP61, TRT2 and TRR4), although Northern blot revealed potential precursor
accumulation of the SUP61 tRNA caused by the presence of a synthetic 5’ flanking sequence.
Following the addition of synthetic telomere seed sequences, pulsed‐field gel electrophoresis
(PFGE) and deep sequencing revealed complex structure variations in two independent strain
backgrounds. Except for these structural variations, successful neochromosome construction
demonstrated the applicability of the approaches used and the remarkable ability of the yeast
model to support the presence of a 17th chromosome housing an additional 275 tRNA genes. The
research in this thesis has for the first time described the design, construction and
characterisation of a eukaryotic neochromosome de novo. It is hoped that the findings presented
will further our understanding of tRNA biology and enhance the aims of the Sc2.0 project.
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