| Literature DB >> 29045563 |
Ikuo Tomioka1,2, Naotake Nogami1, Terumi Nakatani1, Kensuke Owari1, Naoko Fujita1, Hideyuki Motohashi1, Osamu Takayama1, Kentaro Takae2, Yoshitaka Nagai3,4, Kazuhiko Seki1.
Abstract
Controllable transgene expression systems are indispensable tools for the production of animal models of disease to investigate protein functions at defined periods. However, in nonhuman primates that share genetic, physiological, and morphological similarities with humans, genetic modification techniques have not been well established; therefore, the establishment of novel transgenic models with controllable transgene expression systems will be valuable tools to understand pathological mechanism of human disease. In the present study, we successfully generated transgenic marmosets using a tetracyclin-inducible transgene expression (tet-on) system as a neurodegenerative disease model. The mutant human ataxin 3 gene controlled by the tet-on system was introduced into marmoset embryos via lentiviral transduction, and 34 transgene-introduced embryos were transferred into the uteri of surrogate mothers. Seven live offspring (TET1-7) were obtained, of which four were transgenic. Fibroblasts from TET1 and 3 revealed that inducible transgene expression had occurred after treatment with 10 μg/mL of doxycycline, while treatment with doxycycline via drinking water resulted in 1.7- to 1.8-fold inducible transgene expression compared with before treatment. One transgenic second-generation offspring (TET3-3) was obtained from TET3, and doxycycline-inducible transgene expression in its fibroblasts showed that TET3-3 maintained a high transgene expression level that matched its parent. In conclusion, we established a novel transgenic marmoset line carrying the mutant human ataxin 3 gene controlled by the tet-on system. The development of nonhuman primate models with controllable transgene expression systems will be useful for the identification of disease biomarkers and evaluation of the efficacy and metabolic profiles of therapeutic candidates.Entities:
Keywords: gene regulation; intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI); primates; transgenesis; transgenic/knockout model
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29045563 DOI: 10.1093/biolre/iox129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Reprod ISSN: 0006-3363 Impact factor: 4.285