The study of hprt mutations in cynomolgus monkey T-lymphocytes is part of our effort to understand the mechanisms of mutagenesis in vivo. This primate model allows us to study mutations and their kinetics at the molecular level under well-controlled conditions using recently developed techniques for selection of mutant T-cells and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of hprt cDNA, which is directly sequenced. This is the first report of the sequence of the coding region of the cynomolgus monkey hprt gene and PCR/DNA sequence analysis of seven spontaneous mutant T-cell clones, as well as 23 mutant clones isolated 63 and 601 days after treatment with ethylnitrosourea (ENU, 77 mg/kg, intraperitoneal). cDNA was reverse transcribed from hprt mRNA directly from a lysate of about 2-4 x 10(3) cells, and a 700 bp fragment including the coding region was amplified by PCR and sequenced. Of the seven spontaneous mutants, only one point mutation (GC----AT transition) was detected, and the other six failed to amplify by PCR, possibly due to functional deletions. Of the 14 mutant clones isolated 63 days after ENU treatment, nine base substitutions were detected in ten clones: four transitions (three AT----GC and one GC----AT) and five transversions (four AT----TA and one AT----CG). Of the nine mutants isolated 601 days after ENU treatment, six single base substitutions were detected in six clones (five AT----TA and one AT----CG transversions), and one mutant had a large deletion or insertion. No changes were detected in three clones (one Day 63 and two Day 601 clones). In summary, only one of 15 single base substitutions isolated after ENU treatment was a GC----AT transition mutation and the rest were transitions and transversions at AT sites.
To study the mechanisms of mutagenesis in vivo, we analyzed mutations at the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (hprt) locus using cDNA from cynomolgus monkey T-lymphocytes. In the present study, the spectrum of spontaneous hprt mutations arising in vivo in wild-caught cynomolgus monkey peripheral T-lymphocytes is described. Cells were isolated from peripheral blood, and mutant clones were selected in 6-thioguanine, propagated, and stored frozen. cDNA was copied from hprt mRNA from a lysate of 7,000 to 20,000 cells. A 780-base-pairs (bp) region including the coding region was amplified by polymerase chain reaction and directly sequenced. We sequenced 40 spontaneous mutants from 11 monkeys. Of these 40 clones, 23 (57%) had base-pair substitutions, 11 (28%) had small (< 20 bp) deletions and/or insertions, and 6 (15%) had large (> 20 bp) deletions and/or insertions. Of the 23 base substitutions, 13 were transitions (11 G:C-->A:T, 1 A:T-->G:C, and 1 tandem TT-->CC) and 10 were transversions (3 G:C-->T:A, 3 G:C-->C:G, 2 A:T-->T:A, 2 A:T-->C:G). Bases 209 and 617 were apparent substitution hotspots, which have also been observed as hotspots in human hprt. In 2 clones with large insertions, the inserted bases were of intronic origin. One of these lost 272 bp from exons 2-3 and contained a 93-bp insertion from the middle of intron 3. Two clones with small deletions and 5 clones with large deletions or insertions (7/40 or 17.5%) could be splice mutants.
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