A new strategy for gene targeting and functional proteomics using the DT40 cell line

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Abstract

DT40 cells derived from chicken B lymphocytes exhibit exceptionally high homologous recombination rates. Therefore, they can be used as a convenient tool and model for gene targeting experiments. However, lack of efficient cloning strategies, protein purification protocols and a well annotated protein database limits the utility of these cells for proteomic studies. Here we describe a fast and inexpensive experimental pipeline for protein localization, quantification and mass spectrometry-based interaction studies using DT40 cells. Our newly designed set of pQuant vectors and a sequence- and ligation-independent cloning (SLIC) strategy allow for simple and efficient generation of gene targeting constructs, facilitating homologous-recombination- based protein tagging on a multi-gene scale. We also report proof of principle results using the key proteins involved in RNA decay, namely EXOSC8, EXOSC9, CNOT7 and UPF1. © 2013 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press.

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Orlowska, K. P., Klosowska, K., Szczesny, R. J., Cysewski, D., Krawczyk, P. S., & Dziembowski, A. (2013). A new strategy for gene targeting and functional proteomics using the DT40 cell line. Nucleic Acids Research, 41(17). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt650

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