Genotypic features of lentivirus transgenic mice.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_398BEFA688A2
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Genotypic features of lentivirus transgenic mice.
Journal
Journal of Virology
Author(s)
Sauvain M.O., Dorr A.P., Stevenson B., Quazzola A., Naef F., Wiznerowicz M., Schütz F., Jongeneel V., Duboule D., Spitz F., Trono D.
ISSN
1098-5514[electronic], 0022-538X[linking]
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2008
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
82
Number
14
Pages
7111-7119
Language
english
Abstract
Lentivector-mediated transgenesis is increasingly used, whether for basic studies as an alternative to pronuclear injection of naked DNA or to test candidate gene therapy vectors. In an effort to characterize the genetic features of this approach, we first measured the frequency of germ line transmission of individual proviruses established by infection of fertilized mouse oocytes. Seventy integrants from 11 founder (G0) mice were passed to 111 first generation (G1) pups, for a total of 255 events corresponding to an average rate of transmission of 44%. This implies that integration had most often occurred at the one- or two-cell stage and that the degree of genotypic mosaicism in G0 mice obtained through this approach is generally minimal. Transmission analysis of eight individual proviruses in 13 G2 mice obtained by a G0-G1 cross revealed only 8% of proviral homozygosity, significantly below the 25% expected from purely Mendelian transmission, suggesting counter-selection due to interference with the functions of targeted loci. Mapping of 239 proviral integration sites in 49 founder animals revealed that about 60% resided within annotated genes, with a marked tendency for clustering in the middle of the transcribed region, and that integration was not influenced by the transcriptional orientation. Transcript levels of a set of arbitrarily chosen target genes were significantly higher in two-cell embryos than in embryonic stem cells or adult somatic cells, suggesting that, as previously noted in other settings, lentiviral vectors integrate preferentially into regions of the genome that are transcriptionally active or poised for activation.
Keywords
Animals, Chromosome Mapping, Genetic Vectors, Lentivirus/genetics, Mice, Mice, Transgenic/virology, Mosaicism, Proviruses/genetics, Virus Integration, Wills
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
06/01/2011 11:35
Last modification date
19/03/2021 15:43
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