The prokaryotic Cre-IoxP recombination system is a powerful tool that enables in vitro and in vivo site-specific manipulations of the genome of eukaryotic cells as well as of DNA viruses and their derived vectors. This system, however, has not yet been exploited in the context of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infected cells, perhaps because this virus encodes several functions that induce a strong shutoff of cellular protein synthesis, a fact that could preclude expression of cellular-encoded Cre recombinase. In the present study, we show that efficient site-specific recombination can take place in cell lines expressing Cre, even in the context of HSV-1 infection, as evidenced by the engineering of an HSV-1 recombinant virus and several viral vectors carrying one or two IoxP sequences. More precisely, we have used this system to induce an irreversible switch in the expression of a viral complex transcription unit encoding two different open reading frames and allowing consecutive expression of two reporter genes. Furthermore Cre recombinations were also used to induce the decatenation of the genomic concatemers harbored by amplicon particles upon infection of cells under nonreplicative conditions, thus enabling the rescue of many independent plasmids corresponding to the original amplicon plasmid used to generate the vectors. Thus the Cre-IoxP recombination system can successfully be used for engineering the genome of HSV-1 or HSV-1-based vectors in cultured cells. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
CITATION STYLE
Logvinoff, C., & Epstein, A. L. (2000). Genetic engineering of herpes simplex virus and vector genomes carrying Ioxp sites in cells expressing ere recombinase. Virology, 267(1), 102–110. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1999.0108
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