Yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) are engineered DNA molecules that can clone large segments of DNA from organisms in yeast cells. YACs are constructed by inserting DNA fragments between the two arms of a YAC vector in yeast cells through homologous recombination. The YAC vectors contain elements necessary for the vector to behave like a yeast chromosome, including an origin of replication, centromere, and telomeres. YACs allow cloning and stable maintenance of eukaryotic DNA segments up to 1 million base pairs in length, which has enabled genome mapping, sequencing, and analysis of gene expression regulation.