4.8 Article

Definitive demonstration by synthesis of genome annotation completeness

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1905990116

Keywords

synthetic biology; synthetic genomics; reverse genomics; gene discovery; cleanomics

Funding

  1. San Mateo High School Biotechnology Career Pathway Internship Program
  2. Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship [PDF-388725-2010]
  3. Macquarie University's Molecular Sciences Department, Faculty of Science
  4. Stanford/National Institute of Standards and Technology Joint Initiative for Metrology in Biology

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We develop a method for completing the genetics of natural living systems by which the absence of expected future discoveries can be established. We demonstrate the method using bacteriophage empty setX174, the first DNA genome to be sequenced. Like many well-studied natural organisms, closely related genome sequences are available-23 Bullavirinae genomes related to empty setX174. Using bioinformatic tools, we first identified 315 potential open reading frames (ORFs) within the genome, including the 11 established essential genes and 82 highly conserved ORFs that have no known gene products or assigned functions. Using genome-scale design and synthesis, we made a mutant genome in which all 11 essential genes are simultaneously disrupted, leaving intact only the 82 conserved but cryptic ORFs. The resulting genome is not viable. Cellfree gene expression followed by mass spectrometry revealed only a single peptide expressed from both the cryptic ORF and wild-type genomes, suggesting a potential new gene. A second synthetic genome in which 71 conserved cryptic ORF5 were simultaneously disrupted is viable but with similar to 50% reduced fitness relative to the wild type. However, rather than finding any new genes, repeated evolutionary adaptation revealed a single point mutation that modulates expression of gene H, a known essential gene, and fully suppresses the fitness defect. Taken together, we conclude that the annotation of currently functional ORF5 for the empty setX174 genome is formally complete. More broadly, we show that sequencing and bioinformatics followed by synthesis-enabled reverse genomics, proteomics, and evolutionary adaptation can definitely establish the sufficiency and completeness of natural genome annotations.

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