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Engineering rules that minimize germline silencing of transgenes in simple extrachromosomal arrays in C. elegans

Mohammed D. Aljohani, Sonia El Mouridi, Monika Priyadarshini, Amhed Missael Vargas Velazquez, Christian Frøkjær‐Jensen

2020Nature Communications79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Transgenes are prone to progressive silencing due to their structure, copy number, and genomic location. In C. elegans , repressive mechanisms are particularly strong in the germline with almost fully penetrant transgene silencing in simple extrachromosomal arrays and frequent silencing of single-copy transgene insertions. A class of non-coding DNA, Periodic A n /T n Clusters (PATCs) can prevent transgene-silencing in repressive chromatin or from small interfering RNAs (piRNAs). Here, we describe design rules (codon-optimization, intron and PATC inclusion, elevated temperature (25 °C), and vector backbone removal) for efficient germline expression from arrays in wildtype animals. We generate web-based tools to analyze PATCs and reagents for the convenient assembly of PATC-rich transgenes. An extensive collection of silencing resistant fluorescent proteins (e.g., gfp , mCherry , and tagBFP ) can be used for dissecting germline regulatory elements and a set of enhanced enzymes (Mos1 transposase, Cas9, Cre, and Flp recombinases) enable efficient genetic engineering in C. elegans .

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTransgeneExtrachromosomal DNAGene silencingGermlineGeneticsChromatinmCherryTransposaseRecombinaseComputational biologyGreen fluorescent proteinTransposable elementGenomeGeneRecombinationCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model OrganismsPluripotent Stem Cells Research