bulk segregant analysis by high-throughput sequencing reveals a novel xylose utilization gene from saccharomyces cerevisiae批量隔离高通量测序的分析揭示了一个新颖的木糖利用率从酿酒酵母基因.pdf
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Bulk Segregant Analysis by High-Throughput
Sequencing Reveals a Novel Xylose Utilization Gene from
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Jared W. Wenger, Katja Schwartz, Gavin Sherlock*
Department of Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America
Abstract
Fermentation of xylose is a fundamental requirement for the efficient production of ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass
sources. Although they aggressively ferment hexoses, it has long been thought that native Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains
cannot grow fermentatively or non-fermentatively on xylose. Population surveys have uncovered a few naturally occurring
strains that are weakly xylose-positive, and some S. cerevisiae have been genetically engineered to ferment xylose, but no
strain, either natural or engineered, has yet been reported to ferment xylose as efficiently as glucose. Here, we used a
medium-throughput screen to identify Saccharomyces strains that can increase in optical density when xylose is presented
as the sole carbon source. We identified 38 strains that have this xylose utilization phenotype, including strains of S.
cerevisiae, other sensu stricto members, and hybrids between them. All the S. cerevisiae xylose-utilizing strains we identified
are wine yeasts, and for those that could produce meiotic progeny, the xylose phenotype segregates as a single gene trait.
We mapped this gene by Bulk Segregant Analysis (BSA) using tiling microarrays and high-throughput sequencing. The gene
is a putative xylitol dehydrogenase, which we name XDH1, and is located in the subtelomeric region of the right end of
chromosome XV in a region not present in the S288c reference genome. We further characterized the xylose phenotype by
performing gene expression microarrays and by genetically dissecting the endogenous Saccharomyces xylose pathway. We
have demonstr
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