| Literature DB >> 19638212 |
David Voehringer1, Davina Wu, Hong-Erh Liang, Richard M Locksley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Conditional knockout mice are a useful tool to study the function of gene products in a tissue-specific or inducible manner. Classical approaches to generate targeting vectors for conditional alleles are often limited by the availability of suitable restriction sites. Furthermore, plasmid-based targeting vectors can only cover a few kB of DNA which precludes the generation of targeting vectors where the two loxP sites are placed far apart. These limitations have been overcome in the recent past by using homologous recombination of bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) in Escherichia coli to produce large targeting vector containing two different loxP-flanked selection cassettes so that a single targeting event is sufficient to introduce loxP-sites a great distances into the mouse genome. However, the final targeted allele should be free of selection cassettes and screening for correct removal of selection cassettes can be a laborious task. Therefore, we developed a new strategy to rapidly identify ES cells containing the desired allele.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19638212 PMCID: PMC2724507 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6750-9-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Figure 1Generation of the targeting vector. (A) The retrieval vector was constructed by cloning Sal I/EcoR I and EcoR I/BamH I digested homology arms (colored boxes; about 500 bp) that had been generated by PCR amplification of indicated segments from BAC DNA into BamH I/Sal I digested pBR322. The DTA-SV40pA cassette was inserted into the Rsr II site of 3'RV-2. All four exons (open boxes) of il-13 and the last two exons of il-4 are shown. (B) The EcoR I-linearized retrieval vector was used to retrieve a 27 kB segment from the BAC by gap-repair in DY380 cells. The final targeting vector was generated by insertion of two mini targeting vectors containing either a blasticidin resistance cassette (5'MTV) or a neomycin/kanamycin resistance cassette (3'MTV) flanked by 350–500 bp of homology arms into the second intron of il-13 and downstream of il-4 by recombineering in DY380 cells.
Figure 2Three possible recombination events during Cre-mediated deletion of the Bsd. Expression of Cre recombinase in targeted ES cells can lead to deletion of the NeoR cassette (A), the NeoR and the BsdR cassette (B) or the BsdR cassette (C). Closed triangles indicate loxP sites, open triangles indicate FRT sites.
Figure 3Three steps to generate the final targeted allele. (A) Illustration of the targeted allele before and after deletion of the selection cassettes. The location of the Southern probes and the restriction sites used is indicated. Filled triangles indicate loxP sites and open triangles indicate FRT sites. (B) Southern blot of tail DNA from wild-type (+/+) or heterozygous mice (fl/+) digested with BamH I (to detect the 5' targeting event) or EcoR I (to detect the 3' targeting event). (C) PCR of tail DNA from wild-type (+/+) or heterozygous mice (fl/+) using primers A2-D2 or I-3'4PCR-2. The larger PCR products indicate the presence of the remaining loxP site (A2-D2 PCR) or the FRT/loxP site (I-3'4PCR-2 PCR).
Figure 4The targeted allele is functional and can be efficiently and specifically deleted by the Cre recombinase. RT-PCR analysis of IL-4 and IL-13 expression from Th2 polarized cells (A) or mast cells (B). Cells from 4–13F/- mice (black bars) and CD4-Cre/4–13F/- mice (grey bars) were analyzed. Expression levels are normalized to hprt.