| Literature DB >> 30770771 |
Phuong T Lam1, Stephanie L Padula1, Thanh V Hoang1,2, Justin E Poth1, Lin Liu1, Chun Liang1, Adam S LeFever3, Lindsay M Wallace4, Ruth Ashery-Padan5, Penny K Riggs6, Jordan E Shields6,7, Ohad Shaham5, Sheldon Rowan8, Nadean L Brown9, Tom Glaser9, Michael L Robinson10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite a number of different transgenes that can mediate DNA deletion in the developing lens, each has unique features that can make a given transgenic line more or less appropriate for particular studies. The purpose of this work encompasses both a review of transgenes that lead to the expression of Cre recombinase in the lens and a comparative analysis of currently available transgenic lines with a particular emphasis on the Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre lines that can mediate DNA deletion in the lens placode. Although both of these transgenes are driven by elements of the Pax6 P0 promoter, the Le-Cre transgene consistently leads to ocular abnormalities in homozygous state and can lead to ocular defects on some genetic backgrounds when hemizygous. RESULT: Although both P0-3.9GFPCre and Le-Cre hemizygous transgenic mice undergo normal eye development on an FVB/N genetic background, Le-Cre homozygotes uniquely exhibit microphthalmia. Examination of the expression patterns of these two transgenes revealed similar expression in the developing eye and pancreas. However, lineage tracing revealed widespread non-ocular CRE reporter gene expression in the P0-3.9GFPCre transgenic mice that results from stochastic CRE expression in the P0-3.9GFPCre embryos prior to lens placode formation. Postnatal hemizygous Le-Cre transgenic lenses express higher levels of CRE transcript and protein than the hemizygous lenses of P0-3.9GFPCre mice. Transcriptome analysis revealed that Le-Cre hemizygous lenses deregulated the expression of 15 murine genes, several of which are associated with apoptosis. In contrast, P0-3.9GFPCre hemizygous lenses only deregulated two murine genes. No known PAX6-responsive genes or genes directly associated with lens differentiation were deregulated in the hemizygous Le-Cre lenses.Entities:
Keywords: Cre recombinase; Lens development; Transgenic mice
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30770771 PMCID: PMC6377743 DOI: 10.1186/s40246-019-0192-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Fig. 1DNA constructs used to make Cre-expressing transgenic mouse lines. Black arrows represent the transcription start sites for the mouse Pax6 P0 promoter (blue in the Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre constructs) or the mouse αA-crystallin promoter (light blue in the MLR39 and MLR10 constructs). The pink and green boxes represent CRE and GFP coding sequences, respectively. The thin black line within the αA-crystallin promoter in the MLR10 construct represents the engineered Pax6 binding site. The orange EE and yellow RP boxes represent the Pax6 ectodermal enhancer element and the retina/pancreas enhancer elements, respectively. The IRES (white box in the Le-Cre construct) stands for internal ribosome entry site, and nlsCre stands for Cre recombinase with an added nuclear localization sequence. There is approximately 400 bp of mouse Pax6 sequence from the first intron included at the 3′ end of the Le-Cre transgenic construct, following the GFP coding sequence
Comparison of published CRE transgenic lines with lens expression
| Name | Promoter elements | Method of creation | Lens expression | Non-lens expression | Status | Coding sequences | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Endogenous mouse Tcfap2α gene | Embryonic stem cell targeted mutation | Head surface ectoderm prior to lens placode formation (before E9.0) | Extensive head and trunk surface ectoderm and neural crest cells | Available | CRE | IRES-CRE targeted to the 3’ UTR of the Tcfap2α gene |
|
| 6.5 Kb mouse Pax6 P0 promoter including both the ectodermal enhancer and retina/pancreas enhancer. Approximately 400 bp mouse Pax6 sequence follows the GFP coding sequence | Zygote microinjection | Lens placode and surrounding surface ectoderm by E9.5 with expression continuing in lens epithelium | Endocrine pancreas, all surface ectoderm-derived eye structures, epidermis from eye to snout | Available | CRE and GFP | Nuclear-localized CRE separated from GFP by an IRES. Microphthalmia in homozygotes and genetic background-dependent variable ocular abnormalities in hemizygotes |
|
| Three tandem copies of the mouse Pax6 P0 ectodermal enhancer upstream of the minimal P0 promoter | Zygote microinjection | Lens placode and surrounding surface ectoderm by E9.5 | Optic vesicle by E9.5 | Available | CRE and GFP | CRE separated from GFP by an IRES |
|
| 366 bp mouse αA-crystallin promoter with an internal insertion of a 20 bp Pax6 consensus binding site | Zygote microinjection | Lens vesicle by E10.5–11 | Snout and vibrissae follicles, as well as in parts of the midbrain and pituitary gland by E12.5 | Available | CRE | |
|
| 366 bp mouse αA-crystallin promoter driving CRE with co-injected Tyrosinase minigene | Zygote microinjection | Lens fiber cells by E12.5 | Mosaic RPE expression of CRE | Available | CRE and tyrosinase | Co-injection of both the CRE and tyrosinase transgene resulted in light coat and RPE pigmentation. CRE restricted to lens fibers and RPE |
|
| 366 bp mouse αA-crystallin promoter | Zygote microinjection | Assumed in lens fiber cells by E12.5 | Unknown | Extinct | CRE | First demonstrated use of CRE recombination in transgenic mice |
|
| Approximately 5 kb rat nestin promoter with nestin nervous system-specific enhancer following the human growth hormone poly adenylation signal | Zygote microinjection | Lens epithelium and fiber cells by E14.5 | Central and peripheral nervous system, ciliary body and isolated expression in the heart and kidney | Available | CRE | Widespread non-lens expression including retina and ciliary body within the eye |
|
| 3.9 Kb mouse Pax6 P0 promoter including both the ectodermal enhancer and retina/pancreas enhancer | Zygote microinjection | Lens placode and surrounding surface ectoderm by E9.5 with expression continuing in lens epithelium | Endocrine pancreas, stomach mesenchyme, apical ectodermal ridge, all surface ectoderm-derived eye structures, epidermis from eye to snout | Available | CRE and GFP | CRE and GFP are expressed as a fusion gene |
|
| Minimal mouse P0 Pax6 promoter preceded by a single copy of the 340 bp ectodermal enhancer | Zygote microinjection | Lens placode by E9.5 | Unknown | Extinct | CRE |
Fig. 2Gross comparison of ocular development in wild-type FVB/N mice and P0-3.9GFPCre, Le-Cre, and MLR10 transgenic mice. All genotypes exhibit grossly normal appearing eyes and lenses at all stages examined, with the exception of mice homozygous for the Le-Cre transgene (Le-Cre). Homozygous Le-Cre mice (middle column) exhibit externally obvious microphthalmia and small lenses at 3 weeks after birth (P21). Homozygous Le-Cre lenses exhibit consistent size reduction with evidence of fiber cell disorganization and nuclear retention that progressively worsens with age. As all mice were maintained on an FVB/N inbred background, all P21 eye sections exhibit photoreceptor degeneration from rd1 homozygous mutation [57]
Fig. 3Comparison of Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre embryos using both real-time transgene expression and lineage tracing. GFP (top two rows) co-expressed with the CRE transgene in both Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre mice made it possible to compare real-time transgene expression of both transgenes in whole mount embryos. X-Gal staining (bottom two rows) in embryos carrying both the ROSA26 CRE reporter (Gt(ROSA)26Sor) and either the Le-Cre or P0–3.9GFPCre transgene provided an alternate way to compare the CRE transgenic lines based on lineage tracing of CRE expressing cells. Le-Cre (first row) and P0-3.9GFPCre (second row) transgenic embryos exhibit largely identical GFP expression patterns from E9.5 through E15.5 with the exception of expression in the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) of the forelimb observed specifically in the P0-3.9GFPCre transgenic embryos at E10.5. In contrast to the largely identical pattern of GFP expression, X-Gal staining revealed marked differences in expression between the Le-Cre (third row) and P0-3.9GFPCre (fourth row) transgenic embryos. Although P0-3.9GFPCre exhibited extensive embryo-to-embryo variability, all embryos from this strain exhibited extensive non-ocular X-Gal staining patterns at every stage examined. Externally visible X-Gal staining in the Le-Cre embryos remained restricted to the eye and surface ectoderm surrounding the eye proceeding in a streak of ectoderm toward the developing snout and the pancreas. Some X-Gal staining in the forebrain showed through the surface ectoderm at E9.5 and E10.5 in Le-Cre embryos (asterisks)
Fig. 4Comparison of X-Gal staining patterns in Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre eye sections. Although the ocular pattern of blue X-Gal staining appeared similar in Le-Cre (top row) and P0-3.9GFPCre (bottom row) embryos, patchy retinal X-Gal staining only appeared in P0-3.9GFPCre embryos (asterisk at E12.5)
Fig. 5P0-3.9GFPCre E8.5 embryos exhibit extensive CRE-mediated recombination prior to lens placode formation. At E8.5, X-Gal staining in Le-Cre embryos (top) remained restricted to the developing pancreas. In contrast, P0-3.9GFPCre embryos (bottom) exhibited many patches of X-Gal stained tissue throughout the embryo, with particularly high numbers of blue clones in the developing heart region
Fig. 6Immunohistochemical detection of CRE protein in P0-3.9GFPCre, Le-Cre, and MLR10 transgenic mice at E15.5. MLR10 exhibited CRE protein expression specifically in the nuclei of differentiating lens fiber cells (lf) within the eye at E15.5, while P0-3.9GFPCre, Le-Cre lenses showed obvious CRE protein in the epithelium of both the lens (le) and cornea (ce) and numerous cells within the developing neural retina (nr) indicated by arrows. Notice that the homozygous Le-Cre (Le-Cre) lens is specifically small and misshapen relative to the lenses from the other genotypes. The FVB/N lens exhibits no specific staining with the anti-CRE antibody and serves as a negative control. Autofluorescence in blood cells in the choroid and tunica vasculosa lentis represent non-specific signal (asterisks). Transgenic homozygotes and hemizygotes are indicated by homo and hemi, respectively
Fig. 7Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) localization of the Le-Cre transgene to chromosome 16. Co-localization of fluorescently labeled DNA probes for both CRE (green signal) and BAC DN-4E11, a mouse BAC from chromosome 16 (red signal) confirmed the chromosomal location of the Le-Cre transgene insertion. The approximate cytogenetic location of the Le-Cre transgene is indicated by a red arrowhead on the mouse chromosome 16 idiogram (from the Idiogram Album by David Adler© 1994) on the left side of the figure
Fig. 8Cre expression in Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre lenses. RNA-Seq analysis detected significantly more CRE reads in newborn lens RNA from the Le-Cre mice than from P0-3.9GFPCre mice (a). Quantitative RT-PCR analysis confirmed the increase in CRE mRNA in newborn Le-Cre lenses relative to P0-3.9GFPCre lenses (b). Western blots revealed that newborn Le-Cre lenses also expressed relatively more CRE protein than P0-3.9GFPCre lenses (c, blot). Image-J analysis showed that, relative to GAPDH, the Le-Cre lenses expressed nearly twice as much CRE protein as the P0-3.9GFPCre lenses (c, graph). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean calculated by a two-tailed Student’s t test. Each bar in this figure represents the average of three biological replicates and three technical replicates
Fig. 9Differential gene expression in hemizygous newborn Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre lenses. The expression of transcripts expressed in newborn Le-Cre and P0-3.9GFPCre lenses were compared to newborn lens transcripts from the background FVB/N strain mice by RNA-Seq analysis. A Venn diagram (a) illustrates the total number of genes differentially expressed by the transgenic lenses versus the FVB/N lenses while the heatmap (b) lists all of the transcripts differentially expressed with red indicating overexpression and blue indicating underexpression. The Le-Cre lenses differentially expressed 16 genes while the P0-3.9GFPCre lenses differentially expressed only three genes. Both transgenic lenses overexpressed CRE and Hspb1 transcripts. The P0-3.9GFPCre lenses uniquely underexpressed Usp11. Many of the overexpressed transcripts in the Le-Cre lenses (Cdkn1a, Hmox1, Phlda3, and Trp53inp1) are associated with apoptosis and/or stress response (Hspb1, Ephx1)
Gene ontology terms associated with differentially regulated genes in Le-Cre lenses
| GO term | Count | Genes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative regulation of cell proliferation | 4 | 3.6 × 10−3 | |
| Negative regulation of cell growth | 3 | 4.7 × 10−3 | |
| Cellular response to UV-B | 2 | 6.6 × 10−3 | |
| Intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediator | 2 | 2.5 × 10− 2 | |
| Positive regulation of apoptotic process | 3 | 3.1 × 10−2 | |
| Cellular response to heat | 2 | 3.2 × 10−2 | |
| Negative regulation of signal transduction | 2 | 4.3 × 10−2 | |
| Cell cycle arrest | 2 | 6.5 × 10−2 | |
| Response to toxic substance | 2 | 6.9 × 10−2 | |
| Apoptotic process | 3 | 7.9 × 10−2 | |
| Positive regulation of angiogenesis | 2 | 9.6 × 10−2 |