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Conservative site-specific and single-copy transgenesis in human LINE-1 elements.

Authors :
Vijaya Chandra SH
Makhija H
Peter S
Myint Wai CM
Li J
Zhu J
Ren Z
D'Alcontres MS
Siau JW
Chee S
Ghadessy FJ
Dröge P
Source :
Nucleic acids research [Nucleic Acids Res] 2016 Apr 07; Vol. 44 (6), pp. e55. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 15.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Genome engineering of human cells plays an important role in biotechnology and molecular medicine. In particular, insertions of functional multi-transgene cassettes into suitable endogenous sequences will lead to novel applications. Although several tools have been exploited in this context, safety issues such as cytotoxicity, insertional mutagenesis and off-target cleavage together with limitations in cargo size/expression often compromise utility. Phage λ integrase (Int) is a transgenesis tool that mediates conservative site-specific integration of 48 kb DNA into a safe harbor site of the bacterial genome. Here, we show that an Int variant precisely recombines large episomes into a sequence, term edattH4X, found in 1000 human Long INterspersed Elements-1 (LINE-1). We demonstrate single-copy transgenesis through attH4X-targeting in various cell lines including hESCs, with the flexibility of selecting clones according to transgene performance and downstream applications. This is exemplified with pluripotency reporter cassettes and constitutively expressed payloads that remain functional in LINE1-targeted hESCs and differentiated progenies. Furthermore, LINE-1 targeting does not induce DNA damage-response or chromosomal aberrations, and neither global nor localized endogenous gene expression is substantially affected. Hence, this simple transgene addition tool should become particularly useful for applications that require engineering of the human genome with multi-transgenes.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1362-4962
Volume :
44
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nucleic acids research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26673710
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkv1345