Background. The tetracycline-inducible gene regulation system is a powerful tool that allows temporal and dose-dependent regulation of target transgene expression in vitro and in vivo. Several tetracycline-inducible transgenic mouse models have been described with ubiquitous or tissue-specific expression of tetracycline-transactivator (tTA), reverse tetracycline-transactivator (rtTA) or Tet repressor (TetR). Here we describe a Tet-On transgenic rat that ubiquitously expresses rtTA-M2 driven by the murine ROSA 26 promoter. Results. The homozygous rat line (ROSA-rtTA-M2) generated by lentiviral vector injection, has a single integration site and was derived from the offspring of a genetic mosaic founder with multiple transgene integrations. The rtTA-M2 transgene integrated into an intron of a putative gene on chromosome 2 and does not appear to affect the tissue-specificity or expression of that gene. Fibroblasts from the ROSA-rtTA-M2 rats were transduced with a TetO7/CMV-EGFP lentivirus and exhibited doxycycline dose-dependent expression of the EGFP reporter transgene, in vitro. In addition, doxycycline-inducible EGFP expression was observed, in vivo, when the TetO7/CMV-EGFP lentivirus was injected into testis, kidney and muscle tissues of ROSA-rtTA-M2 rats. Conclusions. This conditional expression rat model may have application for transgenic overexpression or knockdown studies of gene function in development, disease and gene therapy. © 2010 Sheng et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Sheng, Y., Lin, C. C., Yue, J., Sukhwani, M., Shuttleworth, J. J., Chu, T., & Orwig, K. E. (2010). Generation and characterization of a Tet-On (rtTA-M2) transgenic rat. BMC Developmental Biology, 10. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-17
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.