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1.
Mann KL  Huxley C 《Gene》2000,241(2):275-285
The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Sch. pombe) has been proposed as a possible cloning host for both mammalian artificial chromosomes (MACs) and mammalian genomic libraries, due to the large size of its chromosomes and its similarity to higher eukaryotic cells. Here, it was investigated for its ability to form telomeres from human telomere sequence and to stably maintain long stretches of alphoid DNA. Using linear constructs terminating in the telomere repeat, T2AG3, human telomere DNA was shown to efficiently seed telomere formation in Sch. pombe. Much of the human telomeric sequence was removed on addition of Sch. pombe telomeric sequence, a process similar to that described in S. cerevisiae. To investigate the stability of alphoid DNA in fission yeast, bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) containing 130 and 173 kb of alphoid DNA were retrofitted with the Sch. pombe ars1 element and ura4+ marker using Cre-lox recombination. These alphoid BACs were found to be highly unstable in Sch. pombe deleting down to less than 40 kb, whilst control BACs of 96 and 202 kb, containing non-repetitive DNA, were unrearranged. Alphoid DNA has been shown to be sufficient for human centromere function, and this marked instability excludes Sch. pombe as a useful cloning host for mammalian artificial chromosomes. In addition, regions containing repetitive DNA from mammalian genomes may not be truly represented in libraries constructed in Sch. pombe.  相似文献   

2.
Stable gene expression from a mammalian artificial chromosome   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
We have investigated the potential of PAC-based vectors as a route to the incorporation of a gene in a mammalian artificial chromosome (MAC). Previously we demonstrated that a PAC (PAC7c5) containing α-satellite DNA generated mitotically stable MACs in human cells. To determine whether a functional HPRT gene could be assembled in a MAC, PAC7c5 was co-transfected with a second PAC containing a 140 kb human HPRT gene into HPRT-deficient HT1080 cells. Lines were isolated containing a MAC hybridizing with both α-satellite and HPRT probes. The MACs segregated efficiently, associated with kinetochore proteins and stably expressed HPRT message after 60 days without selection. Complementation of the parental HPRT deficiency was confirmed phenotypically by growth on HAT selection. These results suggest that MACs could be further developed for delivering a range of genomic copies of genes into cells and that stable transgene expression can be achieved.  相似文献   

3.
In an attempt to combine a cloned genomic copy of a selectable gene with different cloned centromeric sequences to develop mammalian artificial chromosomes (MAC) we used site specific recombination mediated by purified Cre recombinase acting on the loxP sequence in PAC vector DNA. A new method was required to purify highly concentrated, virtually 100% intact PAC DNA which could be stored for a long period. Here we show the efficient linking of linearized PACs containing alpha satellite DNA from chromosomes X and 17 with sizes of 125 and 140 kb, respectively, to a 95 kb restriction fragment derived from a 175 kb PAC containing the intact human HPRT gene locus.  相似文献   

4.
CENP-B controls centromere formation depending on the chromatin context   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Okada T  Ohzeki J  Nakano M  Yoda K  Brinkley WR  Larionov V  Masumoto H 《Cell》2007,131(7):1287-1300
The centromere is a chromatin region that serves as the spindle attachment point and directs accurate inheritance of eukaryotic chromosomes during cell divisions. However, the mechanism by which the centromere assembles and stabilizes at a specific genomic region is not clear. The de novo formation of a human/mammalian artificial chromosome (HAC/MAC) with a functional centromere assembly requires the presence of alpha-satellite DNA containing binding motifs for the centromeric CENP-B protein. We demonstrate here that de novo centromere assembly on HAC/MAC is dependent on CENP-B. In contrast, centromere formation is suppressed in cells expressing CENP-B when alpha-satellite DNA was integrated into a chromosomal site. Remarkably, on those integration sites CENP-B enhances histone H3-K9 trimethylation and DNA methylation, thereby stimulating heterochromatin formation. Thus, we propose that CENP-B plays a dual role in centromere formation, ensuring de novo formation on DNA lacking a functional centromere but preventing the formation of excess centromeres on chromosomes.  相似文献   

5.
Radiation-reduced chromosomes provide valuable reagents for cloning and mapping genes, but they require multiple rounds of x-ray deletion mutagenesis to excise unwanted chromosomal DNA while maintaining physical attachment of the desired DNA to functional host centromere and telomere sequences. This requirement for chromosomal rearrangements can result in undesirable x-ray induced chromosome chimeras where multiple non-contiguous chromosomal fragments are fused. We have developed a cloning system for maintaining large donor subchromosomal fragments of mammalian DNA in the megabase size range as acentric chromosome fragments (double-minutes) in cultured mouse cells. This strategy relies on randomly inserted selectable markers for donor fragment maintenance. As a test case, we have cloned random segments of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) chromosomal DNA in mouse EMT-6 cells. This was done by cotransfecting plasmids pZIPNeo and pSV2dhfr into DHFR-CHO cells followed by isolation of a Neo + DHFR + CHO donor colony and radiation-fusion-hybridization (RFH) to EMT-6 cells. We then selected for initial resistance to G418 and then to increasing levels of methotrexate (MTX). Southern analysis of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of rare-cutting restriction endonuclease digestions of DNA from five RFH isolates indicated that all five contain at least 600 kb of unrearranged CHO DNA. In situ hybridization with the plasmids pZIPNeo and pSV2dhfr to metaphase chromosomes of MTX-resistant hybrid EMT-6 lines indicated that these markers reside on double-minute chromosomes.  相似文献   

6.
Mammalian metaphase chromosomes can be identified by their characteristic banding pattern when stained with Giemsa dye after brief proteolytic digestion. The resulting G-bands are known to contain regions of DNA enriched in A/T residues and to be the principal location for the L1 (or Kpn 1) family of long interspersed repetitive sequences in human chromosomes. Here we report that antibodies raised against a highly purified and biochemically well characterized nonhistone "High-Mobility Group" protein, HMG-I, specifically localize this protein to the G-bands in mammalian metaphase chromosomes. In some preparations in which chromosomes are highly condensed, HMG-I appears to be located at the centromere and/or telomere regions of mammalian chromosomes as well. To our knowledge, this is the first well-characterized mammalian protein that localizes primarily to G-band regions of chromosomes.  相似文献   

7.
In order to facilitate alterations of large DNA molecules for their introduction into mammalian cells we have characterised the mechanism of site-specific modifications in yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). Newly developed yeast integration vectors with dominant selectable marker genes allow targeted integration into left (centromeric) and right (non-centromeric) YAC arms as well as alterations to the human derived insert DNA. In transformation experiments, integration proceeds exclusively by homologous recombination although yeast prefers linear ends of homology for predefined insertions. Targeted regions can be rescued which expedite the cloning of internal human sequences and the identification of 5' and 3' YAC/insert borders. Integration of the neomycin resistance gene into various parts of the YAC allowed the transfer and stable integration of large DNA molecules into a variety of mammalian cells including embryonic stem cells.  相似文献   

8.
Artificial chromosome vectors are autonomous, replicating DNA sequences containing a centromere, two telomeres and origins of replication. Artificial chromosomes have been proposed as possible vectors for transferring very large sequences of DNA into animals. Our goal has been to insert the entire human heavy- and light-chain immunoglobulin loci into cattle as a step in developing a production system for large quantities of human therapeutic polyclonal antibodies. A mitotically stable fragment of chromosome 14, containing the human heavy-chain locus, was identified. A chromosome cloning system was used to transfer the human lambda locus from an unstable chromosome 22 fragment to the chromosome 14 fragment to create a human artificial chromosome (HAC) carrying both immunoglobulin loci. The HAC vector was introduced into bovine primary fibroblasts. Selected fibroblast clones were rejuvenated and expanded by producing cloned fetuses. Cloned fetal cells were selected and recloned to produce 21 healthy, transchromosomic (Tc) calves. Four were analyzed and shown to functionally rearrange both heavy- and light-chain human immunoglobulin loci and produce human polyclonal antibodies. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using HAC vectors for production of transgenic livestock. More importantly, Tc cattle containing human immunoglobulin genes may be used to produce novel human polyclonal therapeutics.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Genome rearrangement often produces chromosomes with two centromeres (dicentrics) that are inherently unstable because of bridge formation and breakage during cell division. However, mammalian dicentrics, and particularly those in humans, can be quite stable, usually because one centromere is functionally silenced. Molecular mechanisms of centromere inactivation are poorly understood since there are few systems to experimentally create dicentric human chromosomes. Here, we describe a human cell culture model that enriches for de novo dicentrics. We demonstrate that transient disruption of human telomere structure non-randomly produces dicentric fusions involving acrocentric chromosomes. The induced dicentrics vary in structure near fusion breakpoints and like naturally-occurring dicentrics, exhibit various inter-centromeric distances. Many functional dicentrics persist for months after formation. Even those with distantly spaced centromeres remain functionally dicentric for 20 cell generations. Other dicentrics within the population reflect centromere inactivation. In some cases, centromere inactivation occurs by an apparently epigenetic mechanism. In other dicentrics, the size of the α-satellite DNA array associated with CENP-A is reduced compared to the same array before dicentric formation. Extra-chromosomal fragments that contained CENP-A often appear in the same cells as dicentrics. Some of these fragments are derived from the same α-satellite DNA array as inactivated centromeres. Our results indicate that dicentric human chromosomes undergo alternative fates after formation. Many retain two active centromeres and are stable through multiple cell divisions. Others undergo centromere inactivation. This event occurs within a broad temporal window and can involve deletion of chromatin that marks the locus as a site for CENP-A maintenance/replenishment.  相似文献   

11.
We report a protocol for cloning large DNA fragments in yeast artificial chromosomes (YAC). A partial library has been constructed from a somatic hybrid containing chromosome 21 as the single source of human DNA. About 4.0 Mb of human DNA was recovered in 17 YAC clones. Three clones were analyzed by in situ hybridization and mapped on chromosome 21. One clone hybridized with the chromosome 21 centromeric region and may provide new insight both on the molecular structure of centromere and on the localization of Alzheimer disease gene.  相似文献   

12.
Human centromeres remain poorly characterized regions of the human genome despite their importance for the maintenance of chromosomes. In part this is due to the difficulty of cloning of highly repetitive DNA fragments and distinguishing chromosome-specific clones in a genomic library. In this work we report the highly selective isolation of human centromeric DNA using transformation-associated recombination (TAR) cloning. A TAR vector with alphoid DNA monomers as targeting sequences was used to isolate large centromeric regions of human chromosomes 2, 5, 8, 11, 15, 19, 21 and 22 from human cells as well as monochromosomal hybrid cells. The alphoid DNA array was also isolated from the 12 Mb human mini-chromosome ΔYq74 that contained the minimum amount of alphoid DNA required for proper chromosome segregation. Preliminary results of the structural analyses of different centromeres are reported in this paper. The ability of the cloned human centromeric regions to support human artificial chromosome (HAC) formation was assessed by transfection into human HT1080 cells. Centromeric clones from ΔYq74 did not support the formation of HACs, indicating that the requirements for the existence of a functional centromere on an endogenous chromosome and those for forming a de novo centromere may be distinct. A construct with an alphoid DNA array from chromosome 22 with no detectable CENP-B motifs formed mitotically stable HACs in the absence of drug selection without detectable acquisition of host DNAs. In summary, our results demonstrated that TAR cloning is a useful tool for investigating human centromere organization and the structural requirements for formation of HAC vectors that might have a potential for therapeutic applications.  相似文献   

13.
Mammalian artificial chromosomes (MACs) provide a means to introduce large payloads of genetic information into the cell in an autonomously replicating, non-integrating format. Unique among MACs, the mammalian satellite DNA-based Artificial Chromosome Expression (ACE) can be reproducibly generated de novo in cell lines of different species and readily purified from the host cells' chromosomes. Purified mammalian ACEs can then be re-introduced into a variety of recipient cell lines where they have been stably maintained for extended periods in the absence of selective pressure. In order to extend the utility of ACEs, we have established the ACE System, a versatile and flexible platform for the reliable engineering of ACEs. The ACE System includes a Platform ACE, containing >50 recombination acceptor sites, that can carry single or multiple copies of genes of interest using specially designed targeting vectors (ATV) and a site-specific integrase (ACE Integrase). Using this approach, specific loading of one or two gene targets has been achieved in LMTK and CHO cells. The use of the ACE System for biological engineering of eukaryotic cells, including mammalian cells, with applications in biopharmaceutical production, transgenesis and gene-based cell therapy is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
C L Smith  C R Cantor 《Génome》1989,31(2):1055-1058
Two types of physical maps are described: restriction maps made by top down approaches using enzymes that cut the genome infrequently, and complete libraries, made by bottom up approaches using fingerprinting of randomly selected cloned DNA. Construction of such maps for mammalian chromosomes is complicated by the mosaic nature of mammalian genomes, and extensive polymorphisms at the cleavage sites of most enzymes that yield large DNA fragments. However, it appears that both of these potential difficulties can be turned into advantages by new mapping strategies. When combined with yeast artificial chromosome cloning and polymerase chain reaction amplification methods, these approaches should soon yield complete maps of many human chromosomes.  相似文献   

15.
Yeast artificial mini-chromosomes have helped to define the features of chromosome architecture important for accurate segregation and replication and have been used to identify genes important for chromosome stability and as large-fragment cloning vectors. Artificial chromosomes have been developed in human cells but they do not have defined, experimentally predictable structures. Fragments of human chromosomes have also been introduced into mice and in one case passed through the germ line. In these experiments, however, the structure and sequence organization of the fragments was not defined. Structurally defined mammalian mini-chromosome vectors should allow large tracts of DNA to be introduced into the vertebrate germ line for biotechnological purposes and for investigations of features of chromosome structure that influence gene expression. Here, we have determined the structure and sequence organization of an engineered mammalian mini-chromosome, ST1, and shown that it is stably maintained in vertebrate somatic cells and that it can be transmitted through the mouse germ line.  相似文献   

16.
Transfer of yeast artificial chromosomes from yeast to mammalian cells.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Human DNA can be cloned as yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs), each of which contains several hundred kilobases of human DNA. This DNA can be manipulated in the yeast host using homologous recombination and yeast selectable markers. In relatively few steps it is possible to make virtually any change in the cloned human DNA from single base pair changes to deletions and insertions. In order to study the function of the cloned DNA and the effects of the changes made in the yeast, the human DNA must be transferred back into mammalian cells. Recent experiments indicate that large genes can be transferred from the yeast host to mammalian cells in tissue culture and that the genes are transferred intact and are expressed. Using the same methods it may soon be possible to transfer YAC DNA into the mouse germ line so that the expression and function of genes cloned in YACs can be studied in developing and adult mammalian animals.  相似文献   

17.
A mammalian artificial chromosome (MAC) may be assembled through the juxtapposition of three kinds of DNA elements: a centromere, several DNA replication origins, and two telomeric repeats. The resulting structure should be able to carry and express one or more selected genes (transgenes), introduced for specific purposes. The minimal length is unknown, but may be of several Mb.Of its basic elements, the telomeres may present lesser problems, in view of their simple composition and organization. Centromeres could be an issue, given their many unknowns. Mammalian DNA replication origins are at present poorly characterized, but it is expected that at least one may be contained within the MAC components, especially the transgene. Their overall assembly may require a combination of in vivo and in vitro approaches.A promising strategy aims at constructing two telomeric arms of a MAC, one of which may include the transgene. The two novel arms could acquire a functional centromere through recombination with the two arms of a resident chromosome. Alternatively, if the two telomeric constructs are also endowed with properly placed and oriented centromeric sequences, a centromere may be rescued in vivo by homologous recombination with the external parts of the centromere of the resident chromosome. Positive selection for the artificial arms and counterselection against the resident arms should facilitate the assembly process.The assembly of such construct would not change the ploidy number of the host cell. After loading of a transgene, however, the resulting MAC may be isolated and transferred into an expression cell, where it may represent a novel chromosomal element. In this case untoward effects to the host cell may derive from an ensuing dosage effect for the transgene(s) rather than from the presence of a MAC per se.A MAC may contribute to a deeper understanding of the structural requirements for chromosomal function and evolution as well as the mechanism of chromatin formation. It should also help in the development of second generation vectors for transfer of Mb-long DNA sequences, as required for properly regulated mammalian gene function as well as, possibly, for therapy.  相似文献   

18.
The transformation-associated recombination (TAR) procedure allows rapid, site-directed cloning of specific human chromosomal regions as yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). The procedure requires knowledge of only a single, relatively small genomic sequence that resides adjacent to the chromosomal region of interest. We applied this approach to the cloning of the neocentromere DNA of a marker chromosome that we have previously shown to have originated through the activation of a latent centromere at human chromosome 10q25. Using a unique 1.4-kb DNA fragment as a “hook” in TAR experiments, we achieved single-step isolation of the critical neocentromere DNA region as two stable, 110- and 80-kb circular YACs. For obtaining large quantities of highly purified DNA, these YACs were retrofitted with the yeast–bacteria–mammalian-cells shuttle vector BRV1, electroporated intoEscherichia coliDH10B, and isolated as bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). Extensive characterization of these YACs and BACs by PCR and restriction analyses revealed that they are identical to the corresponding regions of the normal chromosome 10 and provided further support for the formation of the neocentromere within the marker chromosome through epigenetic activation.  相似文献   

19.
Yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) spanning the centromeric region of the human Y chromosome were introduced into mouse LA-9 cells by spheroplast fusion in order to determine whether they would form mammalian artificial chromosomes. In about 50% of the cell lines generated, the YAC DNA was associated with circular extrachromosomal structures. These episomes were only present in a proportion of the cells, usually at high copy number, and were lost rapidly in the absence of selection. These observations suggest that, despite the presence of centromeric sequences, the structures were not segregating efficiently and thus were not forming artificial chromosomes. However, extrachromosomal structures containing alphoid DNA appeared cytogenetically smaller than those lacking it, as long as yeast DNA was also absent. This suggests that alphoid DNA can generate the condensed chromatin structure at the centromere. Edited by: H. F. Willard  相似文献   

20.
T Haaf  P E Warburton  H F Willard 《Cell》1992,70(4):681-696
Centromeres of mammalian and other complex eukaryotic chromosomes are dominated by one or more classes of satellite DNA. To test the hypothesis that alpha-satellite DNA, the major centromeric satellite of primate chromosomes, is involved in centromere structure and/or function, human alpha-satellite DNA was introduced into African green monkey (AGM) cells. Centromere protein binding was apparent at the sites of integrated human alpha-satellite DNA. In the presence of an AGM centromere on the same chromosome, human alpha-satellite was associated with bridges between the separating sets of chromatids at anaphase and an increased number of lagging chromosomes at metaphase, both features consistent with the integrated alpha-satellite disrupting normal chromosome segregation. These experiments suggest that alpha-satellite DNA provides the primary sequence information for centromere protein binding and for at least some functional aspect(s) of a mammalian centromere, playing a role either in kinetochore formation or in sister chromatid apposition.  相似文献   

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