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Series GSE13435 Query DataSets for GSE13435
Status Public on Nov 08, 2008
Title The Repertoire and Dynamics of Evolutionary Adaptations to Controlled Nutrient-Limited Environments in Yeast
Organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Experiment type Expression profiling by array
Genome variation profiling by array
Summary The experimental evolution of laboratory populations of microbes provides an opportunity to observe the evolutionary dynamics of adaptation in real time.Until very recently, however, such studies have been limited by our inability to systematically find mutations in evolved organisms.We overcome this limitation by using a variety of DNA microarray-based techniques to characterize genetic changes, including point mutations, structural changes, and insertion variation, that resulted from the experimental adaptation of 24 haploid and diploid cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to growth in glucose-, sulfate, or phosphate-limited chemostats for ~ 200 generations.We identified frequent genomic amplifications and rearrangements as well as novel retrotransposition events associated with adaptation.Global mutation detection in 10 clonal isolates identified 32 point mutations. On the basis of mutation frequencies, we infer that these mutations and the subsequent dynamics of adaptation are determined by the batch phase of growth prior to initiation of continuous phase in the chemostat.We relate these genotypic changes to phenotypic outcomes, namely global patterns of gene expression, and to increases in fitness by 5-50%. We found that the spectrum of available mutations in glucose or phosphate-limited environments combined with the batch phase population dynamics early in our experiments to allow several distinct genotypic and phenotypic evolutionary pathways in response to these nutrient limitations. By contrast, sulfate-limited populations were much more constrained in both genotypic and phenotypic outcomes.Thus, the reproducibility of evolution varies with specific selective pressures reflecting the constraints inherent in the system-level organization of metabolic processes in the cell.We were able to relate some of the observed adaptive mutations (e.g. transporter gene amplifications) to known features of the relevant metabolic pathways, but many of the mutations pointed to genes not previously associated with the relevant physiology. Thus, in addition to answering basic mechanistic questions about evolutionary mechanisms our work suggests that experimental evolution can also shed light on the function and regulation of individual metabolic pathways.

Keywords: gene expression, CGH, and TSE analysis
 
Overall design consult individual records for details of analysis
This Dataset consists of several experiments:

Gene expression experiments found in Figure 1a of paper:
Design: RNA from each evolved clone or population grown in chemostat culture is compared to RNA from matching ancestor strains grown in the same conditions.
Samples: GSM339025-GSM339088

CGH experiments found in Figure 2A, Figure 3, and Table S2:
Experiment design: DNA from each evolved clone or population is hybridized vs DNA from the matched ancestor strain
Samples: GSM339089-GSM339146

CGH experiments found in Table S3:
Experiment design: DNA from each segregant derived from an evolved strain is hybridized vs DNA from the matched ancestor strain
Samples: GSM339147-GSM339158

Gel band CGH experiments found in Figure S1:
Experiment design: Chromosomes from evolved strains were run on a gel and excised. DNA from the bands is hybridized vs matched ancestor genomic DNA
Samples: GSM339159-GSM339184

TSE CGH experiments found in Table S4:
Experiment design: DNA linked to Ty1/Ty2 sequences was extracted from evolved strains and ancestor strains, and compared to ancestral extracted or genomic DNA as indicated.
Samples: GSM339185-GSM339212

CGH experiments for experiments in Figure S7:
Experiment design: DNA from 2 strains transformed with a SUL1 plasmid hybridized vs DNA from the matched ancestor strain
Samples: GSM339213 and GSM339214
Web link http://genomics-pubs.princeton.edu/ExperimentalEvolution/
 
Contributor(s) Dunham MJ, Gresham D, Desai MM, Tucker CM, Jenq HT, Pai DA, Ward A, DeSevo CG, Botstein D
Citation(s) 19079573
Submission date Nov 03, 2008
Last update date Feb 15, 2018
Contact name Maitreya J. Dunham
E-mail(s) maitreya@uw.edu
Phone 206-543-2338
Organization name University of Washington
Department Genome Sciences
Lab Dunham Lab
Street address Foege Building, S403B, Box 355065
City Seattle
State/province WA
ZIP/Postal code 98195-5065
Country USA
 
Platforms (4)
GPL884 Agilent-011447 Yeast Oligo Microarray G4140A (Feature Number version)
GPL2883 Agilent-013384 Yeast Oligo Microarray (V2) G4140B (Feature Number version)
GPL4131 Agilent-014810 Yeast Whole Genome ChIP-on-Chip Microarray 4x44K (G4493A)
Samples (190)
GSM339025 self/self CEN.PK PK-lim redo
GSM339026 Ag-D-CEN.PK-1N-C-g158-pop-RNA
GSM339027 Ag-D-CEN.PK-1N-C-g164-c1-RNA
Relations
BioProject PRJNA110023

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE13435_RAW.tar 1.0 Gb (http)(custom) TAR (of TXT)
GSE13435_protocols.zip 428.3 Kb (ftp)(http) ZIP
Processed data included within Sample table

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