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Prions are a common mechanism for phenotypic inheritance in wild yeasts
被引:0
|作者:
Randal Halfmann
Daniel F. Jarosz
Sandra K. Jones
Amelia Chang
Alex K. Lancaster
Susan Lindquist
机构:
[1] Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research,Department of Biology
[2] 9 Cambridge Center,undefined
[3] MIT,undefined
[4] 77 Massachusetts Avenue,undefined
[5] Cambridge,undefined
[6] Massachusetts 02139,undefined
[7] USA,undefined
[8] Howard Hughes Medical Institute,undefined
[9] MIT,undefined
[10] 77 Massachusetts Avenue,undefined
[11] Cambridge,undefined
[12] Massachusetts 02139,undefined
[13] USA,undefined
[14] Present addresses: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,undefined
[15] 5323 Harry Hines Blvd. Dallas,undefined
[16] Texas 75390-9038,undefined
[17] USA (R.H.); The Rockefeller University 1230 York Avenue,undefined
[18] New York,undefined
[19] New York 10065,undefined
[20] USA (S.K.J.); Harvard Medical School,undefined
[21] 25 Shattuck Street Boston,undefined
[22] Massachusetts 02115,undefined
[23] USA (A.C.).,undefined
来源:
Nature
|
2012年
/
482卷
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暂无
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摘要:
The self-templating conformations of yeast prion proteins act as epigenetic elements of inheritance. Yeast prions might provide a mechanism for generating heritable phenotypic diversity that promotes survival in fluctuating environments and the evolution of new traits. However, this hypothesis is highly controversial. Prions that create new traits have not been found in wild strains, leading to the perception that they are rare ‘diseases’ of laboratory cultivation. Here we biochemically test approximately 700 wild strains of Saccharomyces for [PSI+] or [MOT3+], and find these prions in many. They conferred diverse phenotypes that were frequently beneficial under selective conditions. Simple meiotic re-assortment of the variation harboured within a strain readily fixed one such trait, making it robust and prion-independent. Finally, we genetically screened for unknown prion elements. Fully one-third of wild strains harboured them. These, too, created diverse, often beneficial phenotypes. Thus, prions broadly govern heritable traits in nature, in a manner that could profoundly expand adaptive opportunities.
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页码:363 / 368
页数:5
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