| Literature DB >> 22745803 |
Lidia M Duncan1, Richard T Timms, Eszter Zavodszky, Florencia Cano, Gordon Dougan, Felix Randow, Paul J Lehner.
Abstract
The isolation of haploid cell lines has recently allowed the power of forward genetic screens to be applied to mammalian cells. The interest in applying this powerful genetic approach to a mammalian system is only tempered by the limited utility of these screens, if confined to lethal phenotypes. Here we expand the scope of these approaches beyond live/dead screens and show that selection for a cell surface phenotype via fluorescence-activated cell sorting can identify the key molecules in an intracellular pathway, in this case MHC class I antigen presentation. Non-lethal haploid genetic screens are widely applicable to identify genes involved in essentially any cellular pathway.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22745803 PMCID: PMC3382162 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0039651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1A haploid genetic screen to identify genes required for cell surface expression of MHC-I molecules. A.
Schematic of the screen. B. Selecting MHC-Ilow cells by FACS. Mutagenised KBM7 cells were labeled for surface MHC-I and those cells defective for MHC-I presentation enriched by two sequential rounds of FACS. The FACS plots correspond to the stages of the screen outlined above them in A. C. The genetic screen identifies multiple genes known to be involved in the MHC-I antigen presentation pathway. Important genes within the MHC-I antigen presentation pathway are targeted by multiple independent retroviral integrations (red triangles).
Figure 2Isolation of knockout clones deficient for components of the MHC-I antigen presentation pathway. A.
Identifying knockout clones by PCR. A schematic representation of the β2m, tapasin and TAP2 knockout clones identified by PCR from 96 single cell clones from the HLA-Blow selected population. Screening a relatively low number of single cell clones is sufficient to identify knockout cells representing the relevant target genes found in a screen. B. The gene-trap insertions result in a loss of gene expression. The knockout clones were analyzed for HLA-A2, β2m, tapasin and TAP2 expression by RT-PCR. C. Knockout of genes involved in the MHC-I pathway impairs cell surface expression of MHC-I molecules. The β2m, HLA-A2, tapasin and TAP2 knockout clones were labeled for the indicated proteins and analyzed by flow cytometry.