High-resolution genotype-free mapping of genetic variation with CRI-SPA-Map

  1. Frank W Albert1
  1. University of Minnesota
  • * Corresponding author; email: falbert{at}umn.edu
  • Abstract

    Genetic variation within species shapes phenotypes, but identifying the specific genes and variants that cause phenotypic differences is costly and challenging. Here, we introduce CRI-SPA-Map, a genetic mapping strategy combining CRISPR-Cas9 genome engineering, selective ploidy ablation (SPA), and high-throughput phenotyping for precise genetic mapping with or without genotyping in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In CRI-SPA-Map, a donor strain carrying SPA machinery is mated to a genetically different recipient strain harboring a genome-integrated selectable cassette. In the resulting diploid, CRISPR-Cas9 cuts the cassette for replacement with DNA from the homologous donor chromosome. Donor chromosomes are then removed using SPA to yield haploid recombinant strains. To establish CRI-SPA-Map, we mate a W303 SPA strain to 92 strains from the BY4742 yeast knockout collection that carry gene deletion cassettes on the left arm of chromosome XIV and create 1,451 recombinant isolates. Whole-genome sequencing verified that deletion cassette replacement introduced short donor DNA tracts of variable length, resulting in a finely recombined mapping population. Using only the known location of the gene deletions, which marks where donor DNA is introduced, we identify a 6.5 kb-region shaping yeast growth. We further dissect this region and identify two causal variants in two genes, MKT1 and SAL1. Engineering these variants alone and in combination reveals gene-by-environment interactions at both genes, as well as epistatic interactions between them that were dependent on the environment. CRI-SPA-Map is a cost-effective, meiosis-free strategy for creating high-resolution recombinant panels of yeast strains for identifying the genetic basis of phenotypic variation.

    • Received September 30, 2025.
    • Accepted March 16, 2026.

    This manuscript is Open Access.

    This article, published in Genome Research, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International license), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

    This article has not yet been cited by other articles.

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    1. Genome Res. gr.281514.125 Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

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