Literature DB >> 16971446

A high-throughput method for cloning and sequencing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integration sites.

Sanggu Kim1, Yein Kim, Teresa Liang, Janet S Sinsheimer, Samson A Chow.   

Abstract

Integration of retroviral DNA is nonspecific and can occur at many sites throughout chromosomes. However, the process is not uniformly distributed, and both hot and cold spots for integration exist. The mechanism that determines target site specificity is not well understood. Because of the nonspecific and widespread nature of integration, studies analyzing the mechanism and factors that control target site selection require the collection and analysis of a large library of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) proviral clones. Such analyses are time-consuming and labor-intensive using conventional means. We have developed an efficient and high-throughput method of sequencing and mapping a large number of independent integration sites in the absence of any selection or bias. The new assay involves the use of a modified HIV-1 (NL-Mme) containing a type IIS restriction site, MmeI, at the right end of viral DNA. Digestion of genomic DNA from NL-Mme-infected cells generated viral DNA-containing fragments of a discrete size. Subsequent ligation-mediated PCR yielded short integration site fragments termed Int-tags, which were concatemerized for determining multiple integration sites in a single sequencing reaction. Analysis of chromosomal features and sequence preference associated with integration events confirmed the validity of the new high-throughput assay. The assay will aid the effort in understanding the mechanisms of target site selection during HIV-1 DNA integration, and the described methodology can be adapted easily to integration site studies involving other retroviruses and transposons.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16971446      PMCID: PMC1642152          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01737-06

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


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  11 in total

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3.  Bidirectional Retroviral Integration Site PCR Methodology and Quantitative Data Analysis Workflow.

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9.  Human immunodeficiency virus integration efficiency and site selection in quiescent CD4+ T cells.

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