ESI mutagenesis: A one-step method for introducing mutations into bacterial artificial chromosomes

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Abstract

Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-based transgenes have emerged as a powerful tool for controlled and conditional interrogation of protein function in higher eukaryotes. Although homologous recombination-based recombineering methods have streamlined the efficient integration of protein tags onto BAC transgenes, generating precise point mutations has remained less efficient and time-consuming. Here, we present a simplified method for inserting point mutations into BAC transgenes requiring a single recombineering step followed by antibiotic selection. This technique, which we call exogenous/synthetic intronization (ESI) mutagenesis, relies on co-integration of a mutation of interest along with a selectable marker gene, the latter of which is harboured in an artificial intron adjacent to the mutation site. Cell lines generated from ESI-mutated BACs express the transgenes equivalently to the endogenous gene, and all cells efficiently splice out the synthetic intron. Thus, ESI mutagenesis provides a robust and effective single-step method with high precision and high efficiency for mutating BAC transgenes.

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APA

Rondelet, A., Pozniakovsky, A., Namboodiri, D., Silva, R. C. D., Singh, D., Leuschner, M., … Bird, A. W. (2021). ESI mutagenesis: A one-step method for introducing mutations into bacterial artificial chromosomes. Life Science Alliance, 4(2). https://doi.org/10.26508/LSA.202000836

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