A straightforward way to engineer DNA in E. coli using homologous recombination is described. The homologous recombination reaction uses RecE and RecT and is transferable between E. coli strains. Several target molecules were manipulated, including high copy plasmids, a large episome and the E. coli chromosome. Sequential steps of homologous or site-specific recombination were used to demonstrate a new logic for engineering DNA, unlimited by the disposition of restriction endonuclease cleavage sites or the size of the target DNA.
The interpretation of genome sequences requires reliable and standardized methods to assess protein function at high throughput. Here we describe a fast and reliable pipeline to study protein function in mammalian cells based on protein tagging in bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). The large size of the BAC transgenes ensures the presence of most, if not all, regulatory elements and results in expression that closely matches that of the endogenous gene. We show that BAC transgenes can be rapidly and reliably generated using 96-well-format recombineering. After stable transfection of these transgenes into human tissue culture cells or mouse embryonic stem URL.The BACFinder clone search and oligo design tool is available online at http://www.mitocheck.org/cgi-bin/BACfinder.Database accession codes. The ChIP/chip data has been submitted to the Gene Expression Omnibus database with accession number GSE10845. COMPETING INTERESTS STATEMENTThe authors declare competing financial interests: details accompany the full-text HTML version of the paper at http:// www.nature.com/naturemethods/. Europe PMC Funders GroupAuthor Manuscript Nat Methods. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2010 May 17. Europe PMC Funders Author ManuscriptsEurope PMC Funders Author Manuscripts cells, the localization, protein-protein and/or protein-DNA interactions of the tagged protein are studied using generic, tag-based assays. The same high-throughput approach will be generally applicable to other model systems.At a time when the 'thousand-dollar genome' seems a realistic goal for the near future, methods for dissecting the functions of the encoded genetic information lag far behind the genome sequence, both in throughput and in quality of the produced data. Genome sequencing and subsequent bioinformatics analysis have made it possible to study the function of genes in mammalian tissue culture cells using systematic reverse-genetic approaches1-3 and have radically improved researchers' ability to identify human disease genes. Such studies typically identify single genes, whose biological function has often not yet been described. In order to place the proteins these genes encode in pathways, these studies must be followed by detailed molecular-level analysis, of which the most powerful types are protein localization and protein-protein interaction. The power of protein localization and protein-protein interaction studies can be seen from the genome-wide application of GFP localization and tandem affinity tag-based complex purification in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which has produced a comprehensive picture of the core proteome of a simple, well-studied model system4-8. The key advantage of yeast for these studies was their efficient intrinsic homologous recombination, which allowed the same tagcoding sequence to be introduced at the endogenous locus of nearly every gene of the genome. The tagged proteins were then systematically analyzed through standardized, generic, tag-based assays.To transfer this approach to mammali...
The SET domain proteins, SUV39 and G9a have recently been shown to be histone methyltransferases speci®c for lysines 9 and 27 (G9a only) of histone 3 (H3). The SET domains of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Set1 and Drosophila trithorax proteins are closely related to each other but distinct from SUV39 and G9a. We characterized the complex associated with Set1 and Set1C and found that it is comprised of eight members, one of which, Bre2, is homologous to the trithorax-group (trxG) protein, Ash2. Set1C requires Set1 for complex integrity and mutation of Set1 and Set1C components shortens telomeres. One Set1C member, Swd2/Cpf10 is also present in cleavage polyadenylation factor (CPF). Set1C methylates lysine 4 of H3, thus adding a new speci®city and a new subclass of SET domain proteins known to methyltransferases. Since methylation of H3 lysine 4 is widespread in eukaryotes, we screened the databases and found other Set1 homologues. We propose that eukaryotic Set1Cs are H3 lysine 4 methyltransferases and are related to trxG action through association with Ash2 homologues. Keywords: chromatin/epigenetic/histone methyltransferase/telomere/trithorax-group IntroductionMembers of the trithorax group (trxG) have been identi®ed by genetic screens of Drosophila for mutations that suppress phenotypes caused by disregulation of polycomb-group (PcG) action or mimic loss-of-function homeotic mutant phenotypes. As expected from these complex genetic screens, the trxG appears to encompass several subclasses of gene regulatory factors (Kennison, 1995). One subclass involves chromatin remodelling activity. The realization that the trxG member Brahma (BRM) is a homologue of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Swi2/Snf2 (Peterson and Herskowitz, 1992;Carlson and Laurent, 1994;Elfring et al., 1994) led to the de®nition of the SWI/SNF complex as a chromatin remodelling machine (Cote et al., 1994;Logie and Peterson, 1997) and the identi®cation of another trxG member, moira, as a further component of the Drosophila SWI/SNF complex (Papoulas et al., 1998). Another trxG subclass encompasses the DNA binding proteins, zeste and GAGA factor. Although these proteins act independently, both appear to play similar roles in the stabilization of higher-order chromatin looping (Chen and Pirrotta, 1993;Katsani et al., 1999). A third subclass within the trxG (called here trxG3) that remains poorly understood includes trithorax itself, ash1 and ash2 (Shearn, 1989).Insight into the potential molecular actions of trxG3 members came from the identi®cation of several domains within their protein sequences (Mazo et al., 1990;Stassen et al., 1995;Adamson and Shearn, 1996;Tripoulas et al., 1996). Both trithorax (Trx) and Ash1 include a SET domain, which was identi®ed through its occurrence in the chromatin factors, Su(var)3-9, enhancer of zeste [E(Z)] and Trx (Jones and Gelbart, 1993;Tschiersch et al., 1994). All three trxG3 members also include one or more PHD ®ngers (Aasland et al., 1995) and Ash2 includes a SPRY domain (Ponting et al., 1997). Of these domains, the S...
Functional analysis of genome sequences requires methods for cloning DNA of interest. However, existing methods, such as library cloning and screening, are too demanding or inefficient for high-throughput application to the wealth of genomic data being delivered by massively parallel sequencing. Here we describe direct DNA cloning based on the discovery that the full-length Rac prophage protein RecE and its partner RecT mediate highly efficient linear-linear homologous recombination mechanistically distinct from conventional recombineering mediated by Redαβ from lambda phage or truncated versions of RecET. We directly cloned all ten megasynthetase gene clusters (each 10–52 kb in length) from Photorhabdus luminescens into expression vectors and expressed two of them in a heterologous host to identify the metabolites luminmycin A and luminmide A/B. We also directly cloned cDNAs and exactly defined segments from bacterial artificial chromosomes. Direct cloning with full-length RecE expands the DNA engineering toolbox and will facilitate bioprospecting for natural products.
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