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Dive into the research topics where Jessica S. Dymond is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica S. Dymond.


Science | 2014

Total Synthesis of a Functional Designer Eukaryotic Chromosome

Narayana Annaluru; Héloïse Muller; Leslie A. Mitchell; Sivaprakash Ramalingam; Giovanni Stracquadanio; Sarah M. Richardson; Jessica S. Dymond; Zheng Kuang; Lisa Z. Scheifele; Eric M. Cooper; Yizhi Cai; Karen Zeller; Neta Agmon; Jeffrey S. Han; Michalis Hadjithomas; Jennifer Tullman; Katrina Caravelli; Kimberly Cirelli; Zheyuan Guo; Viktoriya London; Apurva Yeluru; Sindurathy Murugan; Karthikeyan Kandavelou; Nicolas Agier; Gilles Fischer; Kun Yang; J. Andrew Martin; Murat Bilgel; Pavlo Bohutski; Kristin M. Boulier

Designer Chromosome One of the ultimate aims of synthetic biology is to build designer organisms from the ground up. Rapid advances in DNA synthesis has allowed the assembly of complete bacterial genomes. Eukaryotic organisms, with their generally much larger and more complex genomes, present an additional challenge to synthetic biologists. Annaluru et al. (p. 55, published online 27 March) designed a synthetic eukaryotic chromosome based on yeast chromosome III. The designer chromosome, shorn of destabilizing transfer RNA genes and transposons, is ∼14% smaller than its wild-type template and is fully functional with every gene tagged for easy removal. A synthetic version of yeast chromosome III with every gene tagged can substitute for the original. Rapid advances in DNA synthesis techniques have made it possible to engineer viruses, biochemical pathways and assemble bacterial genomes. Here, we report the synthesis of a functional 272,871–base pair designer eukaryotic chromosome, synIII, which is based on the 316,617–base pair native Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome III. Changes to synIII include TAG/TAA stop-codon replacements, deletion of subtelomeric regions, introns, transfer RNAs, transposons, and silent mating loci as well as insertion of loxPsym sites to enable genome scrambling. SynIII is functional in S. cerevisiae. Scrambling of the chromosome in a heterozygous diploid reveals a large increase in a-mater derivatives resulting from loss of the MATα allele on synIII. The complete design and synthesis of synIII establishes S. cerevisiae as the basis for designer eukaryotic genome biology.


Nature | 2011

Synthetic chromosome arms function in yeast and generate phenotypic diversity by design

Jessica S. Dymond; Sarah M. Richardson; Candice E. Coombes; Timothy Babatz; Héloı̈se Muller; Narayana Annaluru; William J. Blake; Joy Wu Schwerzmann; Junbiao Dai; Derek Lee Lindstrom; Annabel C. Boeke; Daniel E. Gottschling; Srinivasan Chandrasegaran; Joel S. Bader; Jef D. Boeke

Recent advances in DNA synthesis technology have enabled the construction of novel genetic pathways and genomic elements, furthering our understanding of system-level phenomena. The ability to synthesize large segments of DNA allows the engineering of pathways and genomes according to arbitrary sets of design principles. Here we describe a synthetic yeast genome project, Sc2.0, and the first partially synthetic eukaryotic chromosomes, Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome synIXR, and semi-synVIL. We defined three design principles for a synthetic genome as follows: first, it should result in a (near) wild-type phenotype and fitness; second, it should lack destabilizing elements such as tRNA genes or transposons; and third, it should have genetic flexibility to facilitate future studies. The synthetic genome features several systemic modifications complying with the design principles, including an inducible evolution system, SCRaMbLE (synthetic chromosome rearrangement and modification by loxP-mediated evolution). We show the utility of SCRaMbLE as a novel method of combinatorial mutagenesis, capable of generating complex genotypes and a broad variety of phenotypes. When complete, the fully synthetic genome will allow massive restructuring of the yeast genome, and may open the door to a new type of combinatorial genetics based entirely on variations in gene content and copy number.


Science | 2017

Design of a synthetic yeast genome

Sarah M. Richardson; Leslie A. Mitchell; Giovanni Stracquadanio; Kun Yang; Jessica S. Dymond; James E. DiCarlo; Dongwon Lee; Cheng Lai Victor Huang; Srinivasan Chandrasegaran; Yizhi Cai; Jef D. Boeke; Joel S. Bader

We describe complete design of a synthetic eukaryotic genome, Sc2.0, a highly modified Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome reduced in size by nearly 8%, with 1.1 megabases of the synthetic genome deleted, inserted, or altered. Sc2.0 chromosome design was implemented with BioStudio, an open-source framework developed for eukaryotic genome design, which coordinates design modifications from nucleotide to genome scales and enforces version control to systematically track edits. To achieve complete Sc2.0 genome synthesis, individual synthetic chromosomes built by Sc2.0 Consortium teams around the world will be consolidated into a single strain by “endoreduplication intercross.” Chemically synthesized genomes like Sc2.0 are fully customizable and allow experimentalists to ask otherwise intractable questions about chromosome structure, function, and evolution with a bottom-up design strategy.


Genetics | 2008

Teaching Synthetic Biology, Bioinformatics and Engineering to Undergraduates: The Interdisciplinary Build-a-Genome Course

Jessica S. Dymond; Lisa Z. Scheifele; Sarah M. Richardson; Pablo A. Lee; Srinivasan Chandrasegaran; Joel S. Bader; Jef D. Boeke

A major challenge in undergraduate life science curricula is the continual evaluation and development of courses that reflect the constantly shifting face of contemporary biological research. Synthetic biology offers an excellent framework within which students may participate in cutting-edge interdisciplinary research and is therefore an attractive addition to the undergraduate biology curriculum. This new discipline offers the promise of a deeper understanding of gene function, gene order, and chromosome structure through the de novo synthesis of genetic information, much as synthetic approaches informed organic chemistry. While considerable progress has been achieved in the synthesis of entire viral and prokaryotic genomes, fabrication of eukaryotic genomes requires synthesis on a scale that is orders of magnitude higher. These high-throughput but labor-intensive projects serve as an ideal way to introduce undergraduates to hands-on synthetic biology research. We are pursuing synthesis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomes in an undergraduate laboratory setting, the Build-a-Genome course, thereby exposing students to the engineering of biology on a genomewide scale while focusing on a limited region of the genome. A synthetic chromosome III sequence was designed, ordered from commercial suppliers in the form of oligonucleotides, and subsequently assembled by students into ∼750-bp fragments. Once trained in assembly of such DNA “building blocks” by PCR, the students accomplish high-yield gene synthesis, becoming not only technically proficient but also constructively critical and capable of adapting their protocols as independent researchers. Regular “lab meeting” sessions help prepare them for future roles in laboratory science.


Bioengineered bugs | 2012

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae SCRaMbLE system and genome minimization.

Jessica S. Dymond; Jef D. Boeke

We have recently reported the first partially synthetic eukaryotic genome. Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomes synIXR and semi-synVIL are fully synthetic versions of the right arm of chromosome IX and the telomeric segment of the left arm of chromosome VI, respectively, and represent the beginning of the synthetic yeast genome project, Sc2.0, that progressively replaces native yeast DNA with synthetic sequences. We have designed synthetic chromosome sequences according to principles specifying a wild-type phenotype, highly stable genome, and maintenance of genetic flexibility. Although other synthetic genome projects exist, the Sc2.0 approach is unique in that we have implemented design specifications predicted to generate a wild-type phenotype until induction of “SCRaMbLE,” an inducible evolution system that generates significant genetic diversity. Here we further explore the significance of Sc2.0 and show how SCRaMbLE can serve as a genome minimization tool.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2012

Assembling large DNA segments in yeast.

Héloïse Muller; Narayana Annaluru; Joy Wu Schwerzmann; Sarah M. Richardson; Jessica S. Dymond; Eric M. Cooper; Joel S. Bader; Jef D. Boeke; Srinivasan Chandrasegaran

As described in a different chapter in this volume, the uracil-specific excision reaction (USER) fusion method can be used to assemble multiple small DNA fragments (∼0.75-kb size) into larger 3-kb DNA segments both in vitro and in vivo (in Escherichia coli). However, in order to assemble an entire synthetic yeast genome (Sc2.0 project), we need to be able to assemble these 3-kb pieces into larger DNA segments or chromosome-sized fragments. This assembly into larger DNA segments is carried out in vivo, using homologous recombination in yeast. We have successfully used this approach to assemble a 40-kb chromosome piece in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A lithium acetate (LiOAc) protocol using equimolar amount of overlapping smaller fragments was employed to transform yeast. In this chapter, we describe the assembly of 3-kb fragments with an overlap of one building block (∼750 base pairs) into a 40-kb DNA piece.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

CloneQC: lightweight sequence verification for synthetic biology

Pablo A. Lee; Jessica S. Dymond; Lisa Z. Scheifele; Sarah M. Richardson; Katrina J. Foelber; Jef D. Boeke; Joel S. Bader

Synthetic biology projects aim to produce physical DNA that matches a designed target sequence. Chemically synthesized oligomers are generally used as the starting point for building larger and larger sequences. Due to the error rate of chemical synthesis, these oligomers can have many differences from the target sequence. As oligomers are joined together to make larger and larger synthetic intermediates, it becomes essential to perform quality control to eliminate intermediates with errors and retain only those DNA molecules that are error free with respect to the target. This step is often performed by transforming bacteria with synthetic DNA and sequencing colonies until a clone with a perfect sequence is identified. Here we present CloneQC, a lightweight software pipeline available as a free web server and as source code that performs quality control on sequenced clones. Input to the server is a list of desired sequences and forward and reverse reads for each clone. The server generates summary statistics (error rates and success rates target-by-target) and a detailed report of perfect clones. This software will be useful to laboratories conducting in-house DNA synthesis and is available at http://cloneqc.thruhere.net/ and as Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) licensed source.


Methods in Enzymology | 2013

Explanatory chapter: quantitative PCR.

Jessica S. Dymond

Quantitative PCR (qPCR), also called real-time PCR or quantitative real-time PCR, is a PCR-based technique that couples amplification of a target DNA sequence with quantification of the concentration of that DNA species in the reaction. This method enables calculation of the starting template concentration and is therefore a frequently used analytical tool in evaluating DNA copy number, viral load, SNP detection, and allelic discrimination. When preceded by reverse-transcription PCR, qPCR is a powerful tool to measure mRNA expression and is the gold standard for microarray gene expression data confirmation. Given the broad applications of qPCR and the many technical variations that have been developed, a brief survey of qPCR, including technical background, available chemistries, and data analysis techniques will provide a framework for both experimental design and evaluation.


Methods in Enzymology | 2013

Preparation of Genomic DNA from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Jessica S. Dymond

The ability to isolate genomic DNA rapidly and effectively for analysis by PCR, Southern blotting, or other methods is an essential skill. This protocol provides a fast and efficient method for obtaining genomic DNA from S. cerevisiae.


Methods in Enzymology | 2013

Saccharomyces cerevisiae growth media.

Jessica S. Dymond

This protocol describes the preparation of different types of media to grow the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, both on plates and in liquid culture.

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Joel S. Bader

Johns Hopkins University

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Kun Yang

Johns Hopkins University

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Eric M. Cooper

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Lisa Z. Scheifele

Loyola University Maryland

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