From the Cover: Directed,efficient, and versatile modifications of the Drosophila genome by genomic engineering |
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Authors: | Juan Huang Wenke Zhou Wei Dong Annie M. Watson Yang Hong |
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Affiliation: | Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 |
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Abstract: | With the completion of genome sequences of major model organisms, increasingly sophisticated genetic tools are necessary for investigating the complex and coordinated functions of genes. Here we describe a genetic manipulation system termed “genomic engineering” in Drosophila. Genomic engineering is a 2-step process that combines the ends-out (replacement) gene targeting with phage integrase φC31-mediated DNA integration. First, through an improved and modified gene targeting method, a founder knock-out line is generated by deleting the target gene and replacing it with an integration site of φC31. Second, DNA integration by φC31 is used to reintroduce modified target-gene DNA into the native locus in the founder knock-out line. Genomic engineering permits directed and highly efficient modifications of a chosen genomic locus into virtually any desired mutant allele. We have successfully applied the genomic engineering scheme on 6 different genes and have generated at their loci more than 70 unique alleles. |
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Keywords: | cell polarity ends-out targeting homologous recombination phiC31 integrase |
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