Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.

Most common systems of genetic engineering of mammalian cells are associated with insertional mutagenesis of the modified cells. Insertional mutagenesis is also a popular approach to generate random alterations for gene discovery projects. A better understanding of the interaction of the structural...

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Main Authors: Ruchi Singhal, Xiaotao Deng, Alex A Chenchik, Eugene S Kandel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3016401?pdf=render
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author Ruchi Singhal
Xiaotao Deng
Alex A Chenchik
Eugene S Kandel
author_facet Ruchi Singhal
Xiaotao Deng
Alex A Chenchik
Eugene S Kandel
author_sort Ruchi Singhal
collection DOAJ
description Most common systems of genetic engineering of mammalian cells are associated with insertional mutagenesis of the modified cells. Insertional mutagenesis is also a popular approach to generate random alterations for gene discovery projects. A better understanding of the interaction of the structural elements within an insertional mutagen and the ability of such elements to influence host genes at various distances away from the insertion site is a matter of considerable practical importance.We observed that, in the context of a lentiviral construct, a transcript, which is initiated at an internal CMV promoter/enhancer region and incorporates a splice donor site, is able to extend past a collinear viral LTR and trap exons of host genes, while the polyadenylation signal, which is naturally present in the LTR, is spliced out. Unexpectedly, when a vector, which utilizes this phenomenon, was used to produce mutants with elevated activity of NF-κB, we found mutants, which owed their phenotype to the effect of the insert on a gene located tens or even hundreds of kilobases away from the insertion site. This effect did not result from a CMV-driven transcript, but was sensitive to functional suppression of the insert. Interestingly, despite the long-distance effect, expression of loci most closely positioned to the insert appeared unaffected.We concluded that a polyadenylation signal in a retroviral LTR, when occurring within an intron, is an inefficient barrier against the formation of a hybrid transcript, and that a vector containing a strong enhancer may selectively affect the function of genes far away from its insertion site. These phenomena have to be considered when experimental or therapeutic transduction is performed. In particular, the long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis bring into question the relevance of the lists of disease-associated retroviral integration targets, which did not undergo functional validation.
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spelling doaj.art-943e97ee86dd4e08acd3b377049d88512022-12-22T03:57:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0161e1583210.1371/journal.pone.0015832Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.Ruchi SinghalXiaotao DengAlex A ChenchikEugene S KandelMost common systems of genetic engineering of mammalian cells are associated with insertional mutagenesis of the modified cells. Insertional mutagenesis is also a popular approach to generate random alterations for gene discovery projects. A better understanding of the interaction of the structural elements within an insertional mutagen and the ability of such elements to influence host genes at various distances away from the insertion site is a matter of considerable practical importance.We observed that, in the context of a lentiviral construct, a transcript, which is initiated at an internal CMV promoter/enhancer region and incorporates a splice donor site, is able to extend past a collinear viral LTR and trap exons of host genes, while the polyadenylation signal, which is naturally present in the LTR, is spliced out. Unexpectedly, when a vector, which utilizes this phenomenon, was used to produce mutants with elevated activity of NF-κB, we found mutants, which owed their phenotype to the effect of the insert on a gene located tens or even hundreds of kilobases away from the insertion site. This effect did not result from a CMV-driven transcript, but was sensitive to functional suppression of the insert. Interestingly, despite the long-distance effect, expression of loci most closely positioned to the insert appeared unaffected.We concluded that a polyadenylation signal in a retroviral LTR, when occurring within an intron, is an inefficient barrier against the formation of a hybrid transcript, and that a vector containing a strong enhancer may selectively affect the function of genes far away from its insertion site. These phenomena have to be considered when experimental or therapeutic transduction is performed. In particular, the long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis bring into question the relevance of the lists of disease-associated retroviral integration targets, which did not undergo functional validation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3016401?pdf=render
spellingShingle Ruchi Singhal
Xiaotao Deng
Alex A Chenchik
Eugene S Kandel
Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
PLoS ONE
title Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
title_full Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
title_fullStr Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
title_full_unstemmed Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
title_short Long-distance effects of insertional mutagenesis.
title_sort long distance effects of insertional mutagenesis
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3016401?pdf=render
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AT xiaotaodeng longdistanceeffectsofinsertionalmutagenesis
AT alexachenchik longdistanceeffectsofinsertionalmutagenesis
AT eugeneskandel longdistanceeffectsofinsertionalmutagenesis