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Legrand M, Forche A, Selmecki A, Chan C, Kirkpatrick DT, Berman J (2008) Haplotype mapping of a diploid non-meiotic organism using existing and induced aneuploidies. PLoS Genet 4(1):e1
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Abstract:Haplotype maps (HapMaps) reveal underlying sequence variation and facilitate the study of recombination and genetic diversity. In general, HapMaps are produced by analysis of Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) segregation in large numbers of meiotic progeny. Candida albicans, the most common human fungal pathogen, is an obligate diploid that does not appear to undergo meiosis. Thus, standard methods for haplotype mapping cannot be used. We exploited naturally occurring aneuploid strains to determine the haplotypes of the eight chromosome pairs in the C. albicans laboratory strain SC5314 and in a clinical isolate. Comparison of the maps revealed that the clinical strain had undergone a significant amount of genome rearrangement, consisting primarily of crossover or gene conversion recombination events. SNP map haplotyping revealed that insertion and activation of the UAU1 cassette in essential and non-essential genes can result in whole chromosome aneuploidy. UAU1 is often used to construct homozygous deletions of targeted genes in C. albicans; the exact mechanism (trisomy followed by chromosome loss versus gene conversion) has not been determined. UAU1 insertion into the essential ORC1 gene resulted in a large proportion of trisomic strains, while gene conversion events predominated when UAU1 was inserted into the non-essential LRO1 gene. Therefore, induced aneuploidies can be used to generate HapMaps, which are essential for analyzing genome alterations and mitotic recombination events in this clonal organism.
Status: Published Type: Journal Article|Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural PubMed ID: 18179283


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Topics
Topics not linked to GenesGenes linked to topics
LRO1
(C. albicans)
ORC1
(C. albicans)
Candida albicans
Comparative genomic hybridization

DNA/RNA Sequence Features

Fungal Related Genes/Proteins
Mapping

Mutants/Phenotypes
Other genomic analysis

Strains/Constructs
Techniques and Reagents

Variant Alleles
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