Browsing by Subject "Gene targeting"
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Item Bacterial gene targeting using group II intron L1.LtrB splicing and retrohoming(2008-05) Yao, Jun, 1974-; Lambowitz, AlanThe Lactococcus lactis Ll.LtrB group II intron retrohomes by reverse splicing into one strand of a double-stranded DNA target site, while the intron-encoded protein cleaves the opposite strand and uses it as a primer for reverse transcription of the inserted intron RNA. The protein and intron RNA function in a ribonucleoprotein particle, with much of the DNA target sequence recognized by base pairing of the intron RNA. Consequently, Ll.LtrB introns can be reprogrammed to insert into specific or random DNA sites by substituting specific or random nucleotide residues in the intron RNA. Here, I show that an Escherichia coli gene disruption library obtained using randomly inserted Ll.LtrB introns contains most viable E. coli gene disruptions. Further, each inserted intron is targeted to a specific site by its unique base-pairing regions, and in most cases, could be recovered by PCR and used unmodified to obtain the desired single disruptant. I also demonstrate that Ll.LtrB introns can be used for efficient gene targeting in a variety of Gram-negative and positive bacteria, including E. coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Bacillus subtilis, and Staphylococcus aureus. Ll.LtrB introns expressed from a broad-host-range vector or an E. coli-S. aureus shuttle vector yielded targeted disruptions in a variety of test genes in these organisms at frequencies of 1-100% without selection. By using an Ll.LtrB intron that integrates in the sense orientation relative to target gene transcription and thus could be removed by RNA splicing, I disrupted the essential gene hsa in S. aureus. Because the splicing of the Ll.LtrB intron by the intron-encoded protein is temperature-sensitive, this method yields a conditional hsa disruptant that grows at 32oC, but not at 43oC. Finally, I developed high-throughput screens to identify E. coli genes that affect either the splicing or retrohoming of the Ll.LtrB intron. By using these screens, I identified fourteen mutants in a variety of genes that have decreased intron retrohoming efficiencies and additional mutants that have increased intron retrohoming efficiencies, in some cases apparently resulting from increased stability of the intron RNA.Item Cardiac Deletion of Smyd2 Is Dispensable for Mouse Heart Development(Public Library of Science, 2010-03-17) Diehl, Florian; Brown, Mark A.; van Amerongen, Machteld J.; Novoyatleva, Tatyana; Wietelmann, Astrid; Harriss, June; Ferrazzi, Fulvia; Böttger, Thomas; Harvey, Richard P.; Tucker, Philip W.; Engel, Felix B.Chromatin modifying enzymes play a critical role in cardiac differentiation. Previously, it has been shown that the targeted deletion of the histone methyltransferase, Smyd1, the founding member of the SET and MYND domain containing (Smyd) family, interferes with cardiomyocyte maturation and proper formation of the right heart ventricle. The highly related paralogue, Smyd2 is a histone 3 lysine 4- and lysine 36-specific methyltransferase expressed in heart and brain. Here, we report that Smyd2 is differentially expressed during cardiac development with highest expression in the neonatal heart. To elucidate the functional role of Smyd2 in the heart, we generated conditional knockout (cKO) mice harboring a cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of Smyd2 and performed histological, functional and molecular analyses. Unexpectedly, cardiac deletion of Smyd2 was dispensable for proper morphological and functional development of the murine heart and had no effect on global histone 3 lysine 4 or 36 methylation. However, we provide evidence for a potential role of Smyd2 in the transcriptional regulation of genes associated with translation and reveal that Smyd2, similar to Smyd3, interacts with RNA Polymerase II as well as to the RNA helicase, HELZ.Item DNA target site recognition and toward gene targeting in mammalian cells by the Ll.LtrB group II intron RNP(2013-05) Hanson, Joseph Haskell; Lambowitz, AlanMobile group II introns insert site-specifically into DNA target sites through a mechanism ("retrohoming") that involves reverse splicing of the intron RNA into the DNA and its subsequent reverse transcription by an intron-encoded protein (IEP) that is associated with the RNA in a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex. Characterization of this RNP complex and its retrohoming activities have enabled the development of programmable mobile group II intron gene targeting vectors routinely used in prokaryotic organisms. Building upon recent research by our lab to develop gene targeting in Xenopus laevis and Drosophila melanogaster using the group II intron Ll.LtrB from Lactococcus lactis, I describe work to extend this system to mammalian cells. I demonstrate that group II intron RNPs can be delivered to mammalian cells efficiently and produced in vivo via a CMV/T7 hybrid expression system. Using a robust single-strand annealing assay to detect homologous recombination induced by double-strand breaks (DSBs), I found that group II intron-mediated DSBs are efficiently repaired by mammalian cells. Despite varied approaches, I failed to detect endogenous group II intron-mediated gene targeting in human and mouse cells in culture. Gene expression microarray analysis and in vivo imaging of RNP molecules indicated that group II intron RNPs are sequestered away from the genome and induce host innate immune responses. I also investigated how the C-terminal DNA-binding domain of the Ll.LtrB IEP contributes to DNA target site recognition. Building upon previous mass spectrophotometric analysis of site-specific UV-crosslinking, I used genetic and biochemical analyses to identify potential protein contacts for key target site residues T-23 and T+5. Genetic selection of mutants in a region contacting T+5 led to identification of LtrA variants with increased retrohoming efficiency. My results provide evidence that the DNA-binding domain of a group II intron reverse transcriptase functions in DNA target site recognition and suggest new methods for changing its DNA target specificity and targeting efficiency.Item Global Identification of Myc Target Genes Reveals Its Direct Role in Mitochondrial Biogenesis and Its E-Box Usage In Vivo(Public Library of Science, 2008-03-12) Kim, Jonghwan; Lee, Ji-hoon; Iyer, Vishwanath R.The Myc oncoprotein is a transcription factor involved in a variety of human cancers. Overexpression of Myc is associated with malignant transformation. In normal cells, Myc is induced by mitotic signals, and in turn, it regulates the expression of downstream target genes. Although diverse roles of Myc have been predicted from many previous studies, detailed functions of Myc targets are still unclear. By combining chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and promoter microarrays, we identified a total of 1469 Myc direct target genes, the majority of which are novel, in HeLa cells and human primary fibroblasts. We observed dramatic changes of Myc occupancy at its target promoters in foreskin fibroblasts in response to serum stimulation. Among the targets of Myc, 107 were nuclear encoded genes involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. Genes with important roles in mitochondrial replication and biogenesis, such as POLG, POLG2, and NRF1 were identified as direct targets of Myc, confirming a direct role for Myc in regulating mitochondrial biogenesis. Analysis of target promoter sequences revealed a strong preference for Myc occupancy at promoters containing one of several described consensus sequences, CACGTG, in vivo. This study thus sheds light on the transcriptional regulatory networks mediated by Myc in vivo.Item Group II intron and gene targeting reactions in Drosophila melanogaster(2011-08) White, Travis Brandon; Lambowitz, Alan; Bull, James J.; Macdonald, Paul M.; Paull, Tanya T.; Stevens, Scott W.Mobile group II introns are retroelements that insert site-specifically into double-stranded DNA sites by a process called retrohoming. Retrohoming activity rests in a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex that contains an intron-encoded protein (IEP) and the excised intron RNA. The intron RNA uses its ribozyme activity to reverse splice into the top strand of the DNA target site, while the IEP cleaves the bottom DNA strand and reverse transcribes the inserted intron. My dissertation focuses on the Lactococcus lactis Ll.LtrB group II intron and its IEP, denoted LtrA. First, I investigated the ability of microinjected Ll.LtrB RNPs to retrohome into plasmid target sites in Drosophila melanogaster precellular blastoderm stage embryos. I found that injection of extra Mg2+ into the embryo was crucial for efficient retrohoming. Next, I compared retrohoming of linear and lariat forms of the intron RNP. Unlike lariat RNPs, retrohoming products of linear intron RNPs displayed heterogeneity at the 5’-intron insertion junction, including 5’-exon resection, intron truncation, and/or repair at regions of microhomology. To investigate whether these junctions result from cDNA ligation by non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ), I analyzed retrohoming of linear and lariat intron RNPs in D. melanogaster embryos with null mutations in the NHEJ genes lig4 and ku70, as well as the DNA repair polymerase polQ. I found that null mutations in each gene decreased retrohoming of linear compared to lariat intron RNPs. To determine whether novel activities of the LtrA protein contributed to the linear intron retrohoming 5’ junctions, I assayed the polymerase, non-templated nucleotide addition and template-switching activities of LtrA on oligonucleotide substrates mimicking the 5’-intron insertion junction in vitro. Although LtrA efficiently template switched to 5’-exon DNA substrates, the junctions produced differed from those observed in vivo, indicating that template switching is not a significant alternative to NHEJ in vivo. Finally, I designed and constructed retargeted Ll.LtrB RNPs to site-specifically insert into endogenous chromosomal DNA sites in D. melanogaster. I obtained intron integration efficiencies into chromosomal targets up to 0.4% in embryos and 0.021% in adult flies. These studies expand the utility of group II intron RNPs as gene targeting tools in model eukaryotic organisms.Item Group II intron mobility and its application in gene targeting(2003-08) Zhong, Jin, 1972-; Lambowitz, AlanItem Group II Intron Protein Localization and Insertion Sites Are Affected by Polyphosphate(Public Library of Science, 2008-06-24) Zhao, Junhua; Niu, Wei; Yao, Jun; Mohr, Sabine; Marcotte, Edward M.; Lambowitz, Alan M.Mobile group II introns consist of a catalytic intron RNA and an intron-encoded protein with reverse transcriptase activity, which act together in a ribonucleoprotein particle to promote DNA integration during intron mobility. Previously, we found that the Lactococcus lactis Ll.LtrB intron-encoded protein (LtrA) expressed alone or with the intron RNA to form ribonucleoprotein particles localizes to bacterial cellular poles, potentially accounting for the intron's preferential insertion in the oriC and ter regions of the Escherichia coli chromosome. Here, by using cell microarrays and automated fluorescence microscopy to screen a transposon-insertion library, we identified five E. coli genes (gppA, uhpT, wcaK, ynbC, and zntR) whose disruption results in both an increased proportion of cells with more diffuse LtrA localization and a more uniform genomic distribution of Ll.LtrB-insertion sites. Surprisingly, we find that a common factor affecting LtrA localization in these and other disruptants is the accumulation of intracellular polyphosphate, which appears to bind LtrA and other basic proteins and delocalize them away from the poles. Our findings show that the intracellular localization of a group II intron-encoded protein is a major determinant of insertion-site preference. More generally, our results suggest that polyphosphate accumulation may provide a means of localizing proteins to different sites of action during cellular stress or entry into stationary phase, with potentially wide physiological consequences.Item Group II Intron-Based Gene Targeting Reactions in Eukaryotes(Public Library of Science, 2008-09-01) Mastroianni, Marta; Watanabe, Kazuo; White, Travis B.; Zhuang, Fanglei; Vernon, Jamie; Matsuura, Manabu; Wallingford, John; Lambowitz, Alan M.Background: Mobile group II introns insert site-specifically into DNA target sites by a mechanism termed retrohoming in which the excised intron RNA reverse splices into a DNA strand and is reverse transcribed by the intron-encoded protein. Retrohoming is mediated by a ribonucleoprotein particle that contains the intron-encoded protein and excised intron RNA, with target specificity determined largely by base pairing of the intron RNA to the DNA target sequence. This feature enabled the development of mobile group II introns into bacterial gene targeting vectors (“targetrons”) with programmable target specificity. Thus far, however, efficient group II intron-based gene targeting reactions have not been demonstrated in eukaryotes. Methodology/Principal Findings: By using a plasmid-based Xenopus laevis oocyte microinjection assay, we show that group II intron RNPs can integrate efficiently into target DNAs in a eukaryotic nucleus, but the reaction is limited by low Mg2+ concentrations. By supplying additional Mg2+, site-specific integration occurs in up to 38% of plasmid target sites. The integration products isolated from X. laevis nuclei are sensitive to restriction enzymes specific for double-stranded DNA, indicating second-strand synthesis via host enzymes. We also show that group II intron RNPs containing either lariat or linear intron RNA can introduce a double-strand break into a plasmid target site, thereby stimulating homologous recombination with a co-transformed DNA fragment at frequencies up to 4.8% of target sites. Chromatinization of the target DNA inhibits both types of targeting reactions, presumably by impeding RNP access. However, by using similar RNP microinjection methods, we show efficient Mg2+-dependent group II intron integration into plasmid target sites in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos and into plasmid and chromosomal target sites in Drosophila melanogster embryos, indicating that DNA replication can mitigate effects of chromatinization. Conclusions/Significance: Our results provide an experimental foundation for the development of group II intron-based gene targeting methods for higher organisms.Item Linking Yeast Gcn5p Catalytic Function and Gene Regulation Using a Quantitative, Graded Dominant Mutant Approach(Public Library of Science, 2012-04-27) Lanza, Amanda M.; Blazeck, John J.; Crook, Nathan C.; Alper, Hal S.Establishing causative links between protein functional domains and global gene regulation is critical for advancements in genetics, biotechnology, disease treatment, and systems biology. This task is challenging for multifunctional proteins when relying on traditional approaches such as gene deletions since they remove all domains simultaneously. Here, we describe a novel approach to extract quantitative, causative links by modulating the expression of a dominant mutant allele to create a function-specific competitive inhibition. Using the yeast histone acetyltransferase Gcn5p as a case study, we demonstrate the utility of this approach and (1) find evidence that Gcn5p is more involved in cell-wide gene repression, instead of the accepted gene activation associated with HATs, (2) identify previously unknown gene targets and interactions for Gcn5p-based acetylation, (3) quantify the strength of some Gcn5p-DNA associations, (4) demonstrate that this approach can be used to correctly identify canonical chromatin modifications, (5) establish the role of acetyltransferase activity on synthetic lethal interactions, and (6) identify new functional classes of genes regulated by Gcn5p acetyltransferase activity—all six of these major conclusions were unattainable by using standard gene knockout studies alone. We recommend that a graded dominant mutant approach be utilized in conjunction with a traditional knockout to study multifunctional proteins and generate higher-resolution data that more accurately probes protein domain function and influence.Item Toward group II intron-based genome targeting in eukaryotic cells(2009-12) Vernon, Jamie Lee; Lambowitz, AlanMobile group II introns consist of a self-splicing RNA molecule and an intron-encoded protein with reverse transcriptase activity that function together in an RNP and catalyze the insertion of the intron into specific DNA target sites by a process known as retrohoming. The mechanism of insertion requires the intron RNA to bind and reverse splice into one strand of the DNA target site, while the intron-associated protein cleaves the opposite DNA strand and reverse transcribes the intron RNA. DNA target site recognition and binding are dependent upon base pairing between the intron RNA and the target DNA molecule. By modifying the recognition sequences in the intron RNA, group II introns can be engineered to insert into virtually any desired target DNA. Based on this technology, a novel class of commercially available group II intron-based gene targeting vectors, called targetrons, has been developed. Targetrons have been used successfully for gene targeting in a broad range of bacteria. Previously, our laboratory demonstrated that group II introns retain controllable retrohoming activity in mammalian cells, albeit with very low targeting efficiency. However, the gene targeting capability of group II introns is not limited to direct insertion of the intron. Group II introns can also create double-strand breaks that stimulate homologous recombination. By virtue of these attributes, mobile group II introns offer great promise for applications in genetic engineering, functional genomics and gene therapy. Here I present the results of experiments in which I tested group II introns for gene targeting activities in eukaryotic cells. First, I demonstrated that group II introns injected into zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos retain in vivo plasmid targeting activity that is enhanced by the addition of magnesium chloride and deoxynucleotides. I also verified that similar in vivo targeting activity is retained in Drosophila melanogaster embryos. Further, I describe repeated experiments in zebrafish embryos designed to target the zebrafish genome with inconclusive results. Group II introns were also delivered to cultured human cells for genome targeting. Here I present promising evidence for the ability of group II introns to stimulate homologous recombination between an exogenously introduced donor DNA molecule and the chromosome. The donor DNA was delivered either as a linearized double-stranded plasmid by electroporation or as a single stranded genome of a recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV). In both cases, cells receiving both the group II intron RNP and the donor DNA showed more efficient integration of the donor DNA than introduction of the donor DNA alone. The studies presented here provide insight into the potential of using group II introns for future applications in gene targeting in eukaryotes.Item Virus-Encoded microRNAs: An Overview and a Look to the Future(Public Library of Science, 2012-12-20) Kincaid, Rodney P.; Sullivan, Christopher S.MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small RNAs that play important roles in the regulation of gene expression. First described as posttranscriptional gene regulators in eukaryotic hosts, virus-encoded miRNAs were later uncovered. It is now apparent that diverse virus families, most with DNA genomes, but at least some with RNA genomes, encode miRNAs. While deciphering the functions of viral miRNAs has lagged behind their discovery, recent functional studies are bringing into focus these roles. Some of the best characterized viral miRNA functions include subtle roles in prolonging the longevity of infected cells, evading the immune response, and regulating the switch to lytic infection. Notably, all of these functions are particularly important during persistent infections. Furthermore, an emerging view of viral miRNAs suggests two distinct groups exist. In the first group, viral miRNAs mimic host miRNAs and take advantage of conserved networks of host miRNA target sites. In the larger second group, viral miRNAs do not share common target sites conserved for host miRNAs, and it remains unclear what fraction of these targeted transcripts are beneficial to the virus. Recent insights from multiple virus families have revealed new ways of interacting with the host miRNA machinery including noncanonical miRNA biogenesis and new mechanisms of posttranscriptional cis gene regulation. Exciting challenges await the field, including determining the most relevant miRNA targets and parlaying our current understanding of viral miRNAs into new therapeutic strategies. To accomplish these goals and to better grasp miRNA function, new in vivo models that recapitulate persistent infections associated with viral pathogens are required.