Variability of Inducible Expression across the Hematopoietic System of Tetracycline Transactivator Transgenic Mice

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Abstract

The tetracycline (tet)-regulated expression system allows for the inducible overexpression of protein-coding genes, or inducible gene knockdown based on expression of short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs). The system is widely used in mice, however it requires robust expression of a tet transactivator protein (tTA or rtTA) in the cell type of interest. Here we used an in vivo tet-regulated fluorescent reporter approach to characterise inducible gene/shRNA expression across a range of hematopoietic cell types of several commonly used transgenic tet transactivator mouse strains. We find that even in strains where the tet transactivator is expressed from a nominally ubiquitous promoter, the efficiency of tet-regulated expression can be highly variable between hematopoietic lineages and between differentiation stages within a lineage. In some cases tet-regulated reporter expression differs markedly between cells within a discrete, immunophenotypically defined population, suggesting mosaic transactivator expression. A recently developed CAG-rtTA3 transgenic mouse displays intense and efficient reporter expression in most blood cell types, establishing this strain as a highly effective tool for probing hematopoietic development and disease. These findings have important implications for interpreting tet-regulated hematopoietic phenotypes in mice, and identify mouse strains that provide optimal tet-regulated expression in particular hematopoietic progenitor cell types and mature blood lineages. © 2013 Takiguchi et al.

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Takiguchi, M., Dow, L. E., Prier, J. E., Carmichael, C. L., Kile, B. T., Turner, S. J., … Dickins, R. A. (2013). Variability of Inducible Expression across the Hematopoietic System of Tetracycline Transactivator Transgenic Mice. PLoS ONE, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0054009

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