| Literature DB >> 23311774 |
Shuji Tani1, Atsushi Tsuji, Emi Kunitake, Jun-Ichi Sumitani, Takashi Kawaguchi.
Abstract
Auxotrophic mutants of Aspergillus can be isolated in the presence of counter-selective compounds, but the process is laborious. We developed a method to enable reversible impairment of the ku80 gene (Aaku80) in the imperfect fungus Aspergillus aculeatus. Aaku80 was replaced with a selection marker, orotidine 5'-phosphate decarboxylase (pyrG), followed by excision of pyrG between direct repeats (DR) to yield the Aaku80 deletion mutant (MR12). The gene-targeting efficiency at the ornithine carbamoyltransferase (argB) locus was drastically elevated from 3% to 96% in MR12. The frequency of marker recycling depended on DR length. One uridine auxotroph was obtained from 3.3 × 105, 1.4 × 105, and 9.2 × 103 conidia from strains harboring 20-, 98-, and 495-bp DRs, respectively. Because these strains maintained the short DRs after 5 d of cultivation, we investigated whether Aaku80 function was disrupted by pyrG insertion with the 20-bp DR and restored after excision of pyrG. The Aaku80 disruption mutant (coku80) was bred by inserting pyrG sandwiched between 20-bp DRs into the second intron of Aaku80, followed by excision of pyrG between the DRs to yield the coku80rec strain. Analyses of homologous recombination frequency and methyl methanesulfonate sensitivity demonstrated that Aaku80 function was disrupted in coku80 but restored in coku80rec. Furthermore, pyrG was maintained in coku80 at least for ten generations. These data indicated that reversible impairment of ku80 in A. aculeatus is useful for functional genomics in cases where genetic segregation is not feasible.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23311774 PMCID: PMC3598690 DOI: 10.1186/2191-0855-3-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
List of primers used in this study
| Primers used to clone the | |
| ku80F1 | 5’-ATGGCNGANAAGGAAGCAACNGT-3’ |
| ku80R3 | 5’-CGTCCATAYTCATANCCYTTGGC-3’ |
| Primers used to clone the | |
| AaargBF3 | 5’-CARGCNATHGCNGAYTTYCARAC-3’ |
| AaargBR2 | 5’-GGNARRCARTGCATRAAYYTCCA-3’ |
| Primers used for the | |
| aku80AF1 | 5’-GCGGCCGCATGGTTCTATGTCGCTTGGC-3’ |
| aku80AR2 | 5’-CGACTGGGTCTCTGCGATGGCGAGTAGCGACGAAG-3’ |
| aku80BF1 | 5’-TGTTTATTGCAGCCAGCATGATGGTGCCAACGCAG-3’ |
| aku80BR1 | 5’-GCGGCCGCATTGCGATGCTGGGTGAC-3’ |
| aku80CF1 | 5’-CTTCGTCGCTACTCGCCATCGCAGAGACCCAGTCG-3’ |
| aku80CR1 | 5’-GAGAGCATTGTCTGCGGATGGTGGGGATGGGTTG-3’ |
| npyrF2 | 5’-CAACCCATCCCCACCATCCGCAGACAATGCTCTC-3’ |
| npyrR1 | 5’-CTGCGTTGGCACCATCATGCTGGCTGCAATAAACA-3’ |
| Primers used for the | |
| coku80NF | 5’-TA |
| coku80NR | 5’-TTA |
| coku80CF | 5’-GCC |
| coku80CR | 5’-TGC |
| copyrF | 5’-TA |
| copyrR | 5’-CC |
| Primers used for the | |
| AaargB5F | 5’-GGCGTGATTCTTTGCTCC-3’ |
| AaargB5r2 | 5’-GAGAGCATTGTCTGCGGGGTCGGCGTCAGGTC-3’ |
| AaargB3f3 | 5’-GAGTGGAAATGTGTAACGGATTGCATGGACCCGAG-3’ |
| AaargB3r | 5’-GGGGACATGGCTTCCTAC-3’ |
| npyrF3 | 5’-GACCTGACGCCGACCCCGCAGACAATGCTCTC-3’ |
| npyrR3 | 5’-CTCGGGTCCATGCAATATGCTGGCTGCAATAAAC-3’ |
| mrarg5F | 5’-GGCGGGCTGGAGCTCAC-3’ |
| mrarg5iR | 5’-GCACCGCGCTAGCCGGTCATTCG-3’ |
| mrarg5iF | 5’-CGAATGACCGGATAGCGCGGTGC-3’ |
| mrarg5R | 5’-GAGAGCATTGTCTGCGGGCGATCTTGAGGCCTTCCAG-3’ |
| mrpyr5F | 5’-CTGGAAGGCCTCAAGATCGCCCGCAGACAATGCTCTC-3’ |
| mrpyr5R | 5’-GACAAAATCCTCGCTCTCCTC-3’ |
| mrarg3F1 | 5’-CGGTATTGACTAAAAGGGATCTGGAAGGCCTCAAGATCGC-3’ |
| mrarg3F2 | 5’-CGGTATTGACTAAAAGGGATCCGCTGCAGGCCATC-3’ |
| mrarg3F3 | 5’-CGGTATTGACTAAAAGGGATGCGCCATCTGCTCTCG-3’ |
| mrarg3R | 5’-GAAGGTCAAGGCCGGTG-3’ |
| mrpyr3F | 5’-TGCCCCTCCAGGATAAC-3’ |
| mrpyr3R1 | 5’-GCGATCTTGAGGCCTTCCAGATCCCTTTTAGTCAATACCG-3’ |
| mrpyr3R2 | 5’-GATGGCCTGCAGCGGATCCCTTTAGTCAATACCG-3’ |
| mrpyr3R3 | 5’-CGAGAGCAGATGGCGCATCCCTTTTAGTCAATACCG-3’ |
| Primers used to amplify DNA probes for Southern blot analyses | |
| ku80R4 | 5’-GGAACCCAGAAGAATACGACAC-3’ |
| AaargB3f3 | 5’-GAGTGGAAATGTGTAACGGATTGCATGGACCCGAG-3’ |
| AaargB3r | 5’-GGGGACATGGCTTCCTAC-3’ |
| DxlnR-F1 | 5’-GTCGACCACCGCGATCCAGCAGTACGCCA-3’ |
| DxlnR-R2 | 5’-CACAATCCACAGTGAGACCCACTCTCTCGC-3’ |
Figure 1Southern blot analysis of the -deletion mutants. (a) Restriction enzyme maps of Aaku80 loci in the pyrG13, R1, and MR12 strains of Aspergillus aculeatus. The DNA probe used for Southern blot analysis is indicated with solid bars. N, restriction sites of NcoI. (b) Results of the Southern blot analysis using genomic DNA digested with NcoI (N). Lanes 1, 2, and 3 are pyrG13, R1, and MR12, respectively.
Figure 2Sensitivity of pyrG13 () and MR12 (, ) strains of to methyl methanesulfonate. Conidia were spotted and grew on minimal medium with or without methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) for 5 d.
Figure 3Southern blot analyses of the -auxotroph mutants harboring different lengths of direct repeats for marker recycling. (a) Diagram of the AaargB disruption cassette 2. Thecandy-striped bar indicates the direct repeat sequences. The insertion of guanine (g) and adenine (a) yielded, respectively, a NheI restriction site and a stop codon (asterisk). (b) Left: restriction enzyme maps of the AaargB loci in the MR12 strain and its transformants with the AaargB disruption cassette 2. The DNA probes used for Southern blot analysis are indicated with a double line (5’-probe) and a solid bar (3’-probe). Right: results of Southern blot analysis using genomic DNA digested with NheI and HindIII. Lanes 1, 2, 3, and 4 are MR12, mrTA20, mrTA98, and mrTA495, respectively. (c) Left: restriction enzyme maps of the AaargB locus after the pyrG excision by intramolecular homologous recombination. Right: Southern blot analyses were performed as in (b). Lanes 1, 2, 3, and 4 are MR12 and FOA-resistant strains from mrTA20, mrTA98, and mrTA495, respectively.
Frequencies of intramolecular homologous recombination between direct repeats (DRs) of different lengths
| Length of DR (bp) | 20 | 98 | 495 |
| No. of 5-FOA-resistant strains | 6 | 14 | 120 |
| No. of resistant strains analyzed | 6 | 6 | 10 |
| No. of uridine auxotrophs | 6 | 4 | 9 |
| No. of homologous recombination events between DRs | 3 | 3 | 9 |
The 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA) resistant strains were isolated from 1.0 × 106 conidia.
Figure 4Southern blot analyses of the -disruption mutants. (a) Diagram of Aaku80 disruption cassette 2. The candy-striped bars indicate the second intron of Aaku80. Results of Southern blot analyses using genomic DNA digested with (b) BglII (BII) and (c) PstI (P). Lanes 1, 2, and 3 are MR12, coku80, and coku80rec strains, respectively.