Cargando…

A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector

The production of cells capable of expressing gene(s) of interest is important for a variety of applications in biomedicine and biotechnology, including gene therapy and animal transgenesis. The ability to insert transgenes at a precise location in the genome, using site-specific recombinases such a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki, Kazuki, Yasuhiro, Nakayama, Yuji, Nanba, Eiji, Oshimura, Mitsuo, Ohbayashi, Tetsuya
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3044732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21390305
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017267
_version_ 1782198768049848320
author Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki
Kazuki, Yasuhiro
Nakayama, Yuji
Nanba, Eiji
Oshimura, Mitsuo
Ohbayashi, Tetsuya
author_facet Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki
Kazuki, Yasuhiro
Nakayama, Yuji
Nanba, Eiji
Oshimura, Mitsuo
Ohbayashi, Tetsuya
author_sort Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki
collection PubMed
description The production of cells capable of expressing gene(s) of interest is important for a variety of applications in biomedicine and biotechnology, including gene therapy and animal transgenesis. The ability to insert transgenes at a precise location in the genome, using site-specific recombinases such as Cre, FLP, and ΦC31, has major benefits for the efficiency of transgenesis. Recent work on integrases from ΦC31, R4, TP901-1 and Bxb1 phages demonstrated that these recombinases catalyze site-specific recombination in mammalian cells. In the present study, we examined the activities of integrases on site-specific recombination and gene expression in mammalian cells. We designed a human artificial chromosome (HAC) vector containing five recombination sites (ΦC31 attP, R4 attP, TP901-1 attP, Bxb1 attP and FRT; multi-integrase HAC vector) and de novo mammalian codon-optimized integrases. The multi-integrase HAC vector has several functions, including gene integration in a precise locus and avoiding genomic position effects; therefore, it was used as a platform to investigate integrase activities. Integrases carried out site-specific recombination at frequencies ranging from 39.3–96.8%. Additionally, we observed homogenous gene expression in 77.3–87.5% of colonies obtained using the multi-integrase HAC vector. This vector is also transferable to another cell line, and is capable of accepting genes of interest in this environment. These data suggest that integrases have high DNA recombination efficiencies in mammalian cells. The multi-integrase HAC vector enables us to produce transgene-expressing cells efficiently and create platform cell lines for gene expression.
format Text
id pubmed-3044732
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30447322011-03-09 A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki Kazuki, Yasuhiro Nakayama, Yuji Nanba, Eiji Oshimura, Mitsuo Ohbayashi, Tetsuya PLoS One Research Article The production of cells capable of expressing gene(s) of interest is important for a variety of applications in biomedicine and biotechnology, including gene therapy and animal transgenesis. The ability to insert transgenes at a precise location in the genome, using site-specific recombinases such as Cre, FLP, and ΦC31, has major benefits for the efficiency of transgenesis. Recent work on integrases from ΦC31, R4, TP901-1 and Bxb1 phages demonstrated that these recombinases catalyze site-specific recombination in mammalian cells. In the present study, we examined the activities of integrases on site-specific recombination and gene expression in mammalian cells. We designed a human artificial chromosome (HAC) vector containing five recombination sites (ΦC31 attP, R4 attP, TP901-1 attP, Bxb1 attP and FRT; multi-integrase HAC vector) and de novo mammalian codon-optimized integrases. The multi-integrase HAC vector has several functions, including gene integration in a precise locus and avoiding genomic position effects; therefore, it was used as a platform to investigate integrase activities. Integrases carried out site-specific recombination at frequencies ranging from 39.3–96.8%. Additionally, we observed homogenous gene expression in 77.3–87.5% of colonies obtained using the multi-integrase HAC vector. This vector is also transferable to another cell line, and is capable of accepting genes of interest in this environment. These data suggest that integrases have high DNA recombination efficiencies in mammalian cells. The multi-integrase HAC vector enables us to produce transgene-expressing cells efficiently and create platform cell lines for gene expression. Public Library of Science 2011-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3044732/ /pubmed/21390305 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017267 Text en Yamaguchi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yamaguchi, Shigeyuki
Kazuki, Yasuhiro
Nakayama, Yuji
Nanba, Eiji
Oshimura, Mitsuo
Ohbayashi, Tetsuya
A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title_full A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title_fullStr A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title_full_unstemmed A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title_short A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector
title_sort method for producing transgenic cells using a multi-integrase system on a human artificial chromosome vector
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3044732/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21390305
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017267
work_keys_str_mv AT yamaguchishigeyuki amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT kazukiyasuhiro amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT nakayamayuji amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT nanbaeiji amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT oshimuramitsuo amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT ohbayashitetsuya amethodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT yamaguchishigeyuki methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT kazukiyasuhiro methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT nakayamayuji methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT nanbaeiji methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT oshimuramitsuo methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector
AT ohbayashitetsuya methodforproducingtransgeniccellsusingamultiintegrasesystemonahumanartificialchromosomevector