| Literature DB >> 24139482 |
Zhengyao Xu, Louise Thomas, Ben Davies, Ronald Chalmers, Maggie Smith, William Brown1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Phage-encoded serine integrases, such as φC31 integrase, are widely used for genome engineering. Fifteen such integrases have been described but their utility for genome engineering has not been compared in uniform assays.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24139482 PMCID: PMC4015280 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6750-13-87
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Figure 1Assaying integrase activity in A. The reporter plasmid used to assay activity of the integrases in E. coli. This plasmid, derived from pACYC184, contains lacZα gene encoding the LacZα peptide flanked by integrase attachment sites. The intact reporter plasmid confers β-galactisidase activity on a strain containing the ΔlacZM15 allele and therefore the colonies appear blue on agar containing presence of X-Gal and IPTG. Active integrase promotes site-specific recombination between the attP and attB sites resulting in deletion of the lacZα gene and the colonies appear white. B. The appearance of E.coli containing the reporter plasmid with or without an integrase expression plasmid in the presence of X-Gal and IPTG.
In vivo recombination activity after overexpression of integrases in BL21(DE3)
| Bxb1 | ND | 100 |
| Wβ | ND | 100 |
| BL3 | ND | 100 |
| φR4 | ND | 100 |
| A118 | 0.6 | 100 |
| TG1 | 2.7 | 100 |
| MR11 | 2.9 | 50 |
| φ370 | 4.1 | 100 |
| SPBc | 9.0 | 100 |
| TP901-1 | 32.3 | 100 |
| φRV | 55.9 | 75 |
| FC1 | 74.7 | 100 |
| K38 | 319.6 | 100 |
| φBT1 | 350.4 | 100 |
| φC31 | 758.2 | 100 |
1The amount of StrepII tagged integrase detected in a Western blot from 1 ml of culture.
2The % of plasmid extracted from the cultures that had undergone recombination.
Figure 2Assay system for integrases in mammalian cells. The reporter plasmid design (A) used to assay either site-specific deletion or integration promoted by serine integrases in vertebrate cells. In the deletion reporter construct, called attP array CCAG HyTK attB array, the counter selectable gene CCAG HyTK was placed between an array of attB sites (B) and an array of attP sites (C). In the integration or recombinase-mediated cassette exchange constructs, the docking construct, attP array CCAG HyTK attP array, had the CCAG HyTK gene flanked by two arrays of attP sites and the reporter construct, termed attB array CCAG neo attB array (D) contained the CCAG Neo gene conferring resistance to G418 flanked by arrays of attB sites. The integrase expression constructs are shown schematically in (E) each containing an int gene modified at the 5′ and 3′ ends to encode a StrepII tag and a nuclear localization signal, respectively, and placed down-stream of a CCAG promoter and upstream of an internal ribosome entry site and a dominant selectable marker conferring either zeocin or xanthine resistance (ecogpt).
Figure 3Comparing the activity of φC31 integrase on isolated attachment sites or attachment sites located in the multi-site arrays. A-E. Assays φC31 integrase activity on attachment sites in different configurations. The indicated plasmids containing either attB or attP sites were incubated in the absence or in the presence of 0 nM (lane 1), 100 nM (lane 2), 200 nM (lane 3), 350 nM (lane 4) and 700 nM (lane 5) φC31 integrase. Recombination reactions were digested with either HindIII or BamHI and the products size fractionated by agarose gel electrophoresis. F. The data shown in A-E were analyzed densitometrically and the fraction of the substrate converted into product calculated as described in the materials and methods. This comparative analysis was carried out in two independent experiments.
Figure 4Comparing the activity of fifteen serine recombinases in human HT1080 cells and in mouse ES cells. A. HT1080 cells containing a single integrated attP array CCAG HyTK attB array reporter construct were stably transfected with an integrase expression plasmid selecting for antibiotic resistance. The transfected clones were then subjected to gancyclovir selection to identify those that had lost the CCAG HyTK marker gene and then screened for recombinant attR sites to identify those that had undergone integrase-mediated site-specific deletion of CCAG HyTK. The two bars shown for each integrase reflect the results of two independent experiments. (Additional file 1: Table S4). None of the other eight integrases yielded recombinant gancyclovir resistant clones and they are not shown in this part of the figure. B; ES cells containing a attP array CCAG HyTK attB array reporter integrated at the ROSA26 locus were transiently co-transfected with an integrase expression plasmid and a linearized PGKneo construct to normalize for differences in the efficiency of transfection. Gancyclovir resistant clones were screened for attR sites. Two experiments were carried out and the bars reflect the means of the normalized activities (Additional file 1: Table S5). The analyses were carried out twice on a single attP array CCAG HyTK attB array reporter cell line and thus the data is shown as the mean of the two experiments. C; HT1080 cells that had been transfected with the empty expression vector (CCAG iresZeo) or with the indicated integrase expression vector were transiently transfected with the attP array CCAG HyTK attB array reporter and scored for site-specific recombination by PCR. For φ370 and TG1 integrases the integrase expression vector was co-transfected with the reporter construct, the remaining experiments were carried out with HT1080 cell lines that had been stably transfected with the respective integrase expression construct.
Accuracy of integrase mediated site-specific recombination in human HT1080 and mouse ES cells
| | |||
| TCGGCCGGCTTGTCGACGACGGCGGTCTCCGTCGTCAGGATCATCCGGGC | | | |
| GTCGTGGTTTGTCTGGTCAACCACCGCGGTCTCAGTGGTGTACGGTACAAACCCCGAC | | | |
| TCGGCCGGCTTGTCGACGACGGCGGTCTCAGTGGTGTACGGTACAAACCCCGAC | 3/3 | | |
| GTCGTGGTTTGTCTGGTCAACCACCGCGGTCTCCGTCGTCAGGATCATCCGGGC | 7/7 | 2/2 | |
| fC31 | | | |
| TGCGGGTGCCAGGGCGTGCCCTTGGGCTCCCCGGGCGCGTACTCC | | | |
| GTGCCCCAACTGGGGTAACCTTTGAGTTCTCTCAGTTGGGGG | | | |
| TGCGGGTGCCAGGGCGTGCCCTTGAGTTCTCTCAGTTGGGGG | 3/3 | | |
| TTGCCCCAACTGGGGTAACCTTTGGGCTCCCCGGGCGCGTACTCC | 7/7 | 3/3 | |
| | | | |
| GCGCCCAAGTTGCCCATGACCATGCCGAAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | | |
| AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCACTTGAAGCAGTGGTACTGCTTGTGGGTACACTCTGC | | | |
| GCGCCCAAGTTGCCCATGACCATGCCGAAGCAGTGGTACTGCTTGTGGGTACACTCTGC | 3/3 | | |
| AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCACTTGAAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | 2/9 | 1/2 | |
| del clone 1 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCAC AAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 2 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCACTT AAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 3 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCACTTG GCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 4 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATA GCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 5 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCA GTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 6 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCA GAAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| del clone 7 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCAC AAGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | | |
| ES del clone 1 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATACCA AGCAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | 1/2 | |
| intn clone 1-3 DattR | AGGCATGTTCCCCAAAGCGATA CAGTGGTAGAAGGGCACCGGCAGACAC | 3/3 | |
| fBT1 | | | |
| GTCCTTGACCAGGTTTTTGACGAAAGTGATCCAGATGATCCAGCTCCACACCCCGAACGC | | | |
| GGTGCTGGGTTGTTGTCTCTGGACAGTGATCCATGGGAAACTACTCAGCACCACCAATG | | | |
| GTCCTTGACCAGGTTTTTGACGAAAGTGATCCATGGGAAACTACTCAGCACCACCAATG | 3/3 | | |
| GGTGCTGGGTTGTTGTCTCTGGACAGTGATCCAGATGATCCAGCTCCACACCCCGAACGC | 7/7 | 2/2 | |
| intn clone 1DattR | GGTGCTGGGTTGTTGTCTC GATCCAGATGATCCAGCTCCACACCCCGAACGC | 1/3 | |
| | | | |
| AAGGTAGCGTCAACGATAGGTGTAACTGTCGTGTTTGTAACGGTACTTCCAACAGCTGGCG | | | |
| TAGTTTTAAAGTTGGTTATTAGTTACTGTGATATTTATCACGGTACCCAATAACCAATGAA | | | |
| TAGTTTTAAAGTTGGTTATTAGTTACTGTGATATTTGTAACGGTACTTCCAACAGCTGGCG | 7/7 | 2/2 | |
| | | | |
| AGTGCAGCATGTCATTAATATCAGTACAGATAAAGCTGTATCTCCTGTGAACACAATGGGTG | 7/7 | 2/4 | |
| AAAGTAGTAAGTATCTTAAAAAACAGATAAAGCTGTATATTAAGATACTTACTAC | | | |
| AAAGTAGTAAGTATCTTAAAAAACAGATAAAGCTGTATCTCCTGTGAACACAATGGGTG | | | |
| ES del clone 1 DattR | AAAGTAGTAAGTATCTTAAAAAACA———AGCTGTATCTCCTGTGAACACAATGGGTG | 1/4 | |
| ES del clone 2 DattR | 1/4 | | |
| | | | |
| TGATAATTGCCAACACAATTAACATCTCAATCAAGGTAAATGCTTTTTCGTTTT | | | |
| AATTGCGAGTTTTTATTTCGTTTATTTCAATTAAGGTAACTAAAAAACTCCTTT | | | |
| AATTGCGAGTTTTTATTTCGTTTATTTCAAGGTAAATGCTTTTTCGTTTT | 4/5 | | |
| del clone 1 DattR | AATTGCGAGTTTTTATTTCGTTTATTTC GGTAAATGCTTTTTCGTTTT | 1/5 |
The results show the sequences of the recombinant sites detected following integrase mediate site specific recombination in human HT1080 or mouse ES cells. Underlined and in lowercase in the case of one sequence from a deletion event occurring in ES cells following expression of the SPBc integrase is the sequence of a flanking φ370.1 attP site discussed in the text.
Figure 5Comparing the activity of seven different serine recombinases in human HT1080 cells for their utility in recombinase mediated cassette exchange. A. Cell lines containing a single integrated attP array CCAG HyTK attP array reporter construct and stably expressing the indicated integrase were transfected with the attB array CCAG neo attB array integration reporter construct using lipofectamine. The experiment was carried out three times using two independent cell lines for each of the seven integrases. The number of G418-resistant clones generated by the cassette exchange reaction promoted by the different integrases was normalized by transfection using lipofectamine with a uniform amount of linearized CCAG neo plasmid. Open bars correspond to the number of colonies generated with the reporter plasmid divided by the number of colonies generated with the linearized CCAG neo (for the raw data see Additional file 1: Table S6). Between seven and ten colonies of each transfection were picked and assayed for site-specific recombination by PCR and the total yield of colonies generated by site-specific recombination is represented by the filled bars. B. Cell lines that had been stably transfected with the indicated integrase expression construct were transiently transfected with the indicated integration reporter construct and after three days assayed for site specific recombination by PCR. Two different reactions were used for the assay; one for the Bxb1 integrase and the other for the remaining integrases. The gel on the final panel shows the PCR reaction products obtained when the indicated reporter constructs were transfected into HT1080 cells that expressed no integrase and assayed for site-specific recombination by either of the two reactions.
Figure 6Analysis of G418-resistant, gancyclovir-resistant, clones generated by the Wβ and TP901 integrases. A. Ten G418-resistant, gancyclovir-resistant, attR, attL clones generated by one or other of these two integrases were analysed by PCR across the indicated sequences in each of the two reporter plasmids used in the transfection. The numbers below the plasmid maps indicate the PCR reactions assayed in the table. Primer sequences used for these assays are listed in the (Additional file 1: Table S7). B. Sequence analysis of damaged sites in the three indicated clones. The diagram shows the regions deleted in the remnant of the flanking arrays found in each of three clones.
Figure 7Hypothetical mechanism for the origin of the G418gancyclovir, clones generated by the serine integrases during integration reactions. The figure shows a two step model for the origin of the GANCr Neor attLattRclones arising during the integration experiments. A illustrates the first step in the model; the deletion of the HyTK gene and B illustrates the second step; the integration of the CCAGneo gene. Further details are discussed in the text.