7 research outputs found

    Quantitative analysis of conditional gene inactivation using rationally designed, tetracycline-controlled miRNAs

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    The combination of RNA interference (RNAi) with the tetracycline-controlled transcription activation (tet) system promises to become a powerful method for conditional gene inactivation in cultured cells and in whole organisms. Here, we tested critical sequence elements that originated from miRNA mR-30 for optimal efficiency of RNAi-based gene knockdown in mammalian cells. Rationally designed miRNAs, expressed conditionally via the tet system, led to an efficient knockdown of the expression of both reporter genes and the endogenous mitotic spindle protein TPX2 in HeLa cells. Quantitative studies of the tet-controlled gene inactivation revealed that the residual expression of the target gene is an intrinsic attribute of all cells that cannot be eliminated either by increasing the miRNA to target mRNA ratio or by simultaneous expression of miRNAs targeting different sequences within the transcript. The kinetic analysis of the reversibility of the miRNA mediated knockdown suggests that the recovery of target gene expression is primarily driven by cell division. Our miRNA design provides a useful tool for conditional gene inactivation in combination with the RNA-polymerase II based tet system. The identified characteristics of the conditional RNAi-mediated knockdown need to be considered for its application in cell culture or in vivo

    The cleavable prepiece of an imported mitochondrial protein is sufficient to direct cytosolic dihydrofolate reductase into the mitochondrial matrix

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    AbstractThe cleavable prepiece of the precursor to yeast cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV (an imported mitochondrial protein) was attached to the amino-terminus of mouse dihydrofolate reductase (a cytosolic protein) by gene fusion. The resulting fusion protein was imported into the matrix of isolated, energized yeast mitochondria and cleaved to a polypeptide whose size was similar to that of authentic dihydrofolate reductase

    The Drosophila PROS-29 gene is a new member of the PROS-gene family

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    A Mitochondrial Presequence Can Transport a Chloroplast-encoded Protein into Yeast Mitochondria

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    Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase of chloroplasts contains eight large and eight small subunits. The small subunit is encoded by nuclear DNA, synthesized in the cytoplasm, and imported into chloroplasts. The large subunit is encoded by chloroplast DNA and synthesized within chloroplasts. We show in this communication that the large subunit of Chlamydomonas chloroplasts could be efficiently imported into isolated yeast mitochondria if it was attached to the presequence of a protein transported into the yeast mitochondrial matrix. Thus, synthesis of the large subunit within chloroplasts does not reflect the inability of this subunit to cross membranes. The same mitochondrial presequence could also transport the nuclear-encoded small subunit into yeast mitochondria. However, when the two types of subunits were coimported into mitochondria, they did not assemble with each other inside the heterologous organelle

    Conditional gene expression systems in the transgenic rat brain

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    Abstract Background Turning gene expression on and off at will is one of the most powerful tools for the study of gene function in vivo. While several conditional systems were successful in invertebrates, in mice the Cre/loxP recombination system and the tet-controlled transcription activation system are predominant. Both expression systems allow for spatial and temporal control of gene activities, and, in the case of tet regulation, even for the reversible activation/inactivation of gene expression. Although the rat is the principal experimental model in biomedical research, in particular in studies of neuroscience, conditional rat transgenic systems are exceptionally rare in this species. Results We addressed this lack of technology, and established and thoroughly characterized CreERT2 and tTA transgenic rats with forebrain-specific transgene expression, controlled by the CaMKII alpha promoter. In addition, we developed new universal rat reporter lines for both transcription control systems and established inducible and efficient reporter gene expression in forebrain neurons. Conclusions We demonstrate that conditional genetic manipulations in the rat brain are both feasible and practicable and outline advantages and limitations of the Tet and Cre/loxP system in the rat brain.</p
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