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Transposition of the Tol2 Element, an Ac-Like Element From the Japanese Medaka Fish Oryzias latipes, in Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells
Koichi Kawakamia and Tetsuo Nodab,ca Division of Molecular and Developmental Biology, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka 411-8540, Japan,
b Department of Molecular Genetics, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi 980-8575, Japan
c Department of Cell Biology, The Cancer Institute, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research, Toshima-ku, Tokyo 170-8455, Japan
Corresponding author: Koichi Kawakami, National Institute of Genetics, 1111 Yata, Mishima, Shizuoka 411-8540, Japan., kokawaka{at}lab.nig.ac.jp (E-mail)
Communicating editor: D. GRUNWALD
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The Tol2 transposable element of the Japanese medaka fish belongs to the hAT family of transposons including hobo of Drosophila, Ac of maize, and Tam3 of snapdragon. To date, Tol2 is the only natural transposon in vertebrates that has ever been shown to encode a fully functional transposase. It has not been known, however, whether Tol2 can transpose in vertebrates other than fish. We report here transposition of Tol2 in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. We constructed a transposon donor plasmid containing a nonautonomous Tol2 element with the neomycin resistance gene and a helper plasmid capable of expressing the transposase and introduced the donor plasmid with various amounts of the helper plasmid by electroporation into mouse ES cells. The number of G418-resistant ES colonies increased as the amount of helper plasmid was increased, in a dose-dependent manner, indicating that the transposase activity elevated the integration efficiency. These G418-resistant ES colonies were cloned and the structure of the junction of the integrated Tol2 element and the genomic DNA was analyzed by inverse PCR. In those clones, Tol2 was surrounded by mouse genomic sequences and an 8-bp direct repeat was created adjacent to both ends of Tol2, indicating that Tol2 was integrated in the genome through transposition. The Tol2 transposon system is thus active in mouse as well as in fish. We propose that it should be used as a genetic tool to develop novel gene transfer, transgenesis, and mutagenesis methods in mammals.
THE Tol2 element was isolated from the genome of the Japanese medaka fish, Oryzias latipes, a small freshwater teleost inhabiting East Asia. Laboratory strains of the medaka fish contain
10 copies of the Tol2 element per haploid genome. The DNA sequence of the Tol2 element is similar to those of transposons belonging to the hAT family, i.e., hobo of Drosophila, Ac of maize, and Tam3 of snapdragon (![]()
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Transposons have been used as powerful tools in molecular biological and genetic studies. Although their usefulness and importance have been described in bacteria, plants, and invertebrates, transposon systems have not been developed in mammals because of the lack of an active transposable element. Recently, a synthetic transposon system, Sleeping Beauty (SB), was constructed by analyzing a consensus sequence of nonautonomous transposons of the Tc1/mariner family identified in salmonid genomes and has been shown to be active in human, mouse, and other vertebrates (![]()
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In this study, we aim to test whether the Tol2 transposon system is active in mouse. For this purpose, we developed a two-component assay system consisting of a transposon donor plasmid containing a nonautonomous Tol2 transposon with the neomycin resistance gene and a helper plasmid capable of expressing the Tol2 transposase cDNA and measured transposition in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. It is expected that if transposition occurs in the mouse cells, the transposon on the donor plasmid will be excised and integrated in the genome upon cotransfection with the helper plasmid. Here we describe how the Tol2 element, a natural autonomous transposon from a fish genome, can transpose in mouse ES cells.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Plasmids:
An XhoI site was created in the Tol2 element by inserting double-stranded synthetic oligonucleotides (5'-GAC AGA TCT CAT ATG CTC GAG GGC CC-3' and 5'-GGG CCC TCG AGC ATA TGA GAT CT-3') between the EcoO109I and EcoRV sites of the (Tol2-tyr)
RV plasmid (![]()
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Transfection to ES cells:
The mouse ES cell line, cultivation of ES cells, and transfection by electroporation were described previously (![]()
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Southern blot hybridization and PCR analysis of the genomic DNA:
Genomic DNA from the ES cells was prepared as described previously (![]()
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Inverse PCR:
Inverse PCR was carried out as described (![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Construction of the Tol2 transposon system in mouse:
To test whether the Tol2 transposon system is active in mouse ES cells, we constructed a transposon donor plasmid containing a modified Tol2 transposon, T2KPKneo, with the neomycin resistance (neo) gene expression cassette, and a helper plasmid, pCAGGS-TP, containing the full-length Tol2 transposase cDNA under the control of the CAG promoter, a hybrid cytomegalovirus enhancer/chicken ß-actin promoter, which could direct strong gene expression in mouse ES cells (![]()
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RV element, which contained nearly the same portions of the Tol2 sequence carried by T2KPKneo, could not transpose by itself but retained cis-sequences necessary for transposition (![]()
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Transposase activity increases the integration efficiency:
We first introduced 50 µg of circular DNA of the donor plasmid, pT2KPKneo, by electroporation into mouse ES cells with 300 µg of circular DNA of the helper plasmid, pCAGGS-T2TP. As a control, ES cells were cotransfected with 50 µg of circular DNA of pT2KPKneo and 300 µg of circular DNA of the vector plasmid, pCAGGS. In this initial experiment, we observed a significant increase in the number of G418-resistant colonies when cells were cotransfected with pCAGGS-T2TP.
We then performed cotransfection experiments using various amounts of pCAGGS-T2TP. ES cells were cotransfected with 50 µg of circular pT2KPKneo DNA and 0, 37.5, 75, 150, or 300 µg of circular pCAGGS-T2TP DNA. A total of 300, 262.5, 225, 150, or 0 µg of circular pCAGGS DNA, respectively, was added to the DNA samples prepared for cotransfection to keep the amount of DNA used for electroporation equal. The transfected cells were plated and cultivated in the presence of G418. As shown in Fig 2, the number of G418-resistant colonies increased as the amount of pCAGGS-T2TP increased. These results strongly suggest that the transposase activity synthesized from pCAGGS-T2TP can enhance the efficiency of integration of T2KPKneo through transposition.
PCR and Southern blot analysis:
To determine whether the integration that had occurred in the presence of the helper plasmid was indeed generated through transposition, we isolated and analyzed genomic DNA from the G418-resistant colonies. Ten G418-resistant colonies generated by cotransfection using 50 µg of pT2KPKneo and 300 µg of pCAGGS-T2TP were picked at random and expanded (clones 110 in Fig 3). Also, 10 G418-resistant colonies generated following cotransfection using 50 µg of pT2KPKneo and 300 µg of pCAGGS were picked at random and analyzed (clones 1120 in Fig 3). Genomic DNA was extracted from these clones and analyzed by PCR using the 3'f2 primer, which was located in the 3'-end region of the Tol2 element, and tyr1, which was located adjacent to the 3'-end region of Tol2 in the vector portion (Fig 1). No DNA band was amplified from the ES clones 110 (Fig 3A, lanes 110) while a DNA band of 203 bp was amplified by PCR using the same primers from the ES clones 1120 (Fig 3A, lanes 1120). These results suggested that, in the presence of pCAGGS-T2TP (ES clones 110), the T2KPKneo sequence was integrated in the genome through transposition, and, in the absence of pCAGGS-T2TP (ES clones 1120), the T2KPKneo DNA was integrated with the vector DNA through nonhomologous recombination. The PCR analysis was carried out using primers PGKr1 and r7 as positive controls (Fig 3B).
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Then these genomic DNA were digested with BglII, which should generate one fragment corresponding to each insertion detected by hybridization with the neo gene probe (Fig 1). The Southern blot analysis revealed that T2KPKneo was integrated at different loci in the genome, and, in some cases, a single copy of the T2KPKneo insertion was detected (Fig 3C, top).
Cloning of the junction fragments by inverse PCR:
To characterize the integration at the sequence level, we cloned the junctions of the integrated T2KPKneo element and the surrounding genomic DNA by inverse PCR. The junction fragments containing 5' and 3' ends of the Tol2 element were isolated from the ES clones 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, and 10. In the cases of clones 1, 2, and 7, inverse PCR for the 3' end did not work for unknown reasons. To clone the 3' junction fragments from these ES clones, the sequence of the 5' junction was used for the BLAST analysis against the mouse genomic database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/seq/MmBlast.html). From this analysis, the sequence adjacent to the 3' end of Tol2 could be predicted, and 3' genomic primers that matched with the predicted 3' sequence were designed, respectively. The 3' junction fragments were successfully isolated from the genomic DNA of those ES clones by performing PCR using the 3' genomic primer and a primer in the 3' end of Tol2 (f20) and sequenced. In all of the ES clones, the T2KPKneo sequence was surrounded by the mouse genomic sequence and an 8-bp direct repeat, which was always created at the target site of the Tol2 element (Table 1; ![]()
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The flanking sequences, except for clones 4 and 8, could be mapped on the mouse genome by the BLAST analysis. The results are summarized in Table 1. The sequences obtained from clones 4 and 8 could not be mapped, probably because the greater part of these sequences was occupied by repetitive sequences. Before integration of the Tol2 element, each locus contained only one copy of the 8-bp sequence. From these results, we concluded that the transposase could catalyze transposition of the Tol2 element in mouse ES cells.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
This study revealed that the Tol2 transposon system is active in mouse as well as in fish. The Tol2 transposon system we developed here consists of two components: the transposon donor plasmid, pT2KPKneo, containing a modified Tol2 element with the PGK-neo expression cassette, and the helper plasmid, pCAGGS-T2TP, expressing the transposase. These cis- and trans-elements have been generated from a natural autonomous member (![]()
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We also found that transposition could increase the efficiency of chromosomal integration in mouse ES cells. The efficiency could become >10-fold higher in comparison to integration through nonhomologous recombination. Further, the transposon DNA can be integrated in the genome as a single copy without causing deletions or rearrangements of the genome surrounding the insertion site, which are often associated with chromosomal integration of a foreign DNA through nonhomologous recombination. These indicate that the Tol2 transposon system should be a useful system for gene transfer in mammalian cells.
The Tol2 transposon system may also be used to mutate the genome. We found in several cases that the transposon was inserted within a gene or a hypothetical gene, in either an intron or an exon (Table 1). Although we do not know whether these insertions disrupted the function of the gene, they could be more mutagenic if the transposon construct was designed so that it can interrupt the endogenous transcript (i.e., a gene trap construct, etc.).
The Sleeping Beauty transposon was constructed on the basis of the sequences of transposons of the Tc1/mariner family, and it always integrates at a specific sequence, TA dinucleotides, which is duplicated upon insertion (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank H. Yamanaka for excellent technical assistance, members of the Noda lab for helpful discussion, and K. Arai for continuous encouragement. This work was supported by grants from Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.
Manuscript received June 20, 2003; Accepted for publication October 1, 2003.
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FISCHER, S. E. J., E. WIENHOLDS, and R. H. A. PLASTERK, 2001 Regulated transposition of a fish transposon in the mouse germ line. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98:6759-6764.
HORIE, K., A. KUROIWA, M. IKAWA, M. OKABE, and G. KONDOH et al., 2001 Efficient chromosomal transposition of a Tc1/mariner-like transposon Sleeping Beauty in mice. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98:9191-9196.
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