4.7 Article

Transposon activity, local duplications and propagation of structural variants across haplotypes drive the evolution of the Drosophila S2 cell line

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-022-08472-1

Keywords

Structural rearrangements; Haplotype structure; Cell-line evolution; S2-DRSC

Funding

  1. Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation [2014-0018]
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation [CAN 2017/342, 20 0779 PjF]
  3. Umea University

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By studying the genome structure of the Drosophila melanogaster cell line S2-DRSC, it was found that repetitive sequence insertions or deletions were the most common structural variants, followed by local sequence duplications. The nucleotide-level haplotypes were highly similar but structurally different. The study also discovered that transposable element insertions and local duplications are common in other Drosophila cell lines.
Background Immortalized cell lines are widely used model systems whose genomes are often highly rearranged and polyploid. However, their genome structure is seldom deciphered and is thus not accounted for during analyses. We therefore used linked short- and long-read sequencing to perform haplotype-level reconstruction of the genome of a Drosophila melanogaster cell line (S2-DRSC) with a complex genome structure. Results Using a custom implementation (that is designed to use ultra-long reads in complex genomes with nested rearrangements) to call structural variants (SVs), we found that the most common SV was repetitive sequence insertion or deletion (> 80% of SVs), with Gypsy retrotransposon insertions dominating. The second most common SV was local sequence duplication. SNPs and other SVs were rarer, but several large chromosomal translocations and mitochondrial genome insertions were observed. Haplotypes were highly similar at the nucleotide level but structurally very different. Insertion SVs existed at various haplotype frequencies and were unlinked on chromosomes, demonstrating that haplotypes have different structures and suggesting the existence of a mechanism that allows SVs to propagate across haplotypes. Finally, using public short-read data, we found that transposable element insertions and local duplications are common in other D. melanogaster cell lines. Conclusions The S2-DRSC cell line evolved through retrotransposon activity and vast local sequence duplications, that we hypothesize were the products of DNA re-replication events. Additionally, mutations can propagate across haplotypes (possibly explained by mitotic recombination), which enables fine-tuning of mutational impact and prevents accumulation of deleterious events, an inherent problem of clonal reproduction. We conclude that traditional linear homozygous genome representation conceals the complexity when dealing with rearranged and heterozygous clonal cells.

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