XB-ART-44331
Genesis
2012 Mar 01;503:307-15. doi: 10.1002/dvg.20819.
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Simple, fast, tissue-specific bacterial artificial chromosome transgenesis in Xenopus.
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We have developed a method of injecting bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) DNA into Xenopus embryos that is simple and efficient, and results in consistent and tissue-specific expression of transgenes cloned into BAC vectors. Working with large pieces of DNA, as can be accommodated by BACs, is necessary when studying large or complex genes and conducive to studying the function of long-range regulatory elements that act to control developmentally restricted gene expression. We recombineered fluorescent reporters into three Xenopus tropicalis BAC clones targeting three different genes and report that up to 60% of injected embryos express the reporter in a manner consistent with endogenous expression. The behavior of these BACs, which are replicated after injection, contrasts with that of smaller plasmids, which degrade relatively quickly when injected as circular molecules and generally fail to recapitulate endogenous expression when not integrated into the Xenopus genome.
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Species referenced: Xenopus tropicalis
Genes referenced: atoh7 pax6 rax
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References [+] :
Andreazzoli,
Xrx1 controls proliferation and neurogenesis in Xenopus anterior neural plate.
2003, Pubmed,
Xenbase