Archaexpress: Regulated expression of specific mRNAs in the mouse induced by the expression of an archaeal endonuclease.
Abstract
Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
Abstract:
We generated a new system for manipulating gene expression at the
post-transcriptional level by expressing an archaeal endonuclease
that excises small tRNA introns (Deidda et al.; Nature Biotech.,
21:1499-1504, 2003). Archaea encode an RNA ligase that joins the
resulting exonic fragments created by this action, and it turns out
that mouse cells have an endogenous ligase with equivalent activity.
The only requirement of the archaeal endonuclease is a
bulge-helix-bulge recognition motif in its target RNAs, that is, a
structure rather than a specific sequence; this allows great freedom
in creating and presenting diverse targets in mRNA as well as
structural RNA. We designed experiments to show the operation of this
in vivo cis and trans splicing scheme in mouse cells and in mice.
Induced trans-splicing results in the production of fusion-proteins.
This emergent technology can be used to study protein networks.
Iris type:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
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