General method for cloning amplified DNA by differential screening with genomic probes

1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 578-587
Author(s):  
O Brison ◽  
F Ardeshir ◽  
G R Stark

Mutant Syrian hamster cell lines resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, a potent and specific inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase, have amplified the gene coding for the multifunctional protein (CAD) that includes this activity. The average amount of DNA amplified is approximately 500 kilobases per gene copy, about 20 times the length of the CAD gene itself. A differential screening method which uses genomic DNAs as probes was developed to isolate recombinant phage containing fragments of amplified DNA. One probe was prepared by reassociating fragments of total genomic DNA from 165-28, a mutant cell line with 190 times the wild-type complement of CAD genes, until all of the sequences repeated about 200 times were annealed and then isolating the double-stranded DNA with hydroxyapatite.This DNA was highly enriched in sequences from the entire amplified region, whereas the same sequences were very rare in DNA prepared similarly from wild-type cells. After both DNAs were labeled by nick translation, highly repeated sequences were removed by hybridization to immobilized total genomic DNA from wild-type cells. A library of cloned DNA fragments from mutant 165-28 was screened with both probes, and nine independent fragments containing about 165 kilobases of amplified DNA, including the CAD gene, have been isolated so far. These cloned DNAs can be used to study the structure of the amplified region, to evaluate the nature of the amplification event, and to investigate gene expression from the amplified DNA. For example, one amplified fragment included a gene coding for a 3.8-kilobase, cytoplasmic, polyadenylated RNA which was overproduced greatly in cells resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate. The method for cloning amplified DNA is general and can be used to evaluate the possible involvement of gene amplification in phenomena such as drug resistance, transformation, or differentiation. DNA fragments corresponding to any region amplified about 10-fold or more can be cloned, even if no function for the region is known. The method for removing highly repetitive sequences from genomic DNA probes should also be of general use.

1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 578-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
O Brison ◽  
F Ardeshir ◽  
G R Stark

Mutant Syrian hamster cell lines resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, a potent and specific inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase, have amplified the gene coding for the multifunctional protein (CAD) that includes this activity. The average amount of DNA amplified is approximately 500 kilobases per gene copy, about 20 times the length of the CAD gene itself. A differential screening method which uses genomic DNAs as probes was developed to isolate recombinant phage containing fragments of amplified DNA. One probe was prepared by reassociating fragments of total genomic DNA from 165-28, a mutant cell line with 190 times the wild-type complement of CAD genes, until all of the sequences repeated about 200 times were annealed and then isolating the double-stranded DNA with hydroxyapatite.This DNA was highly enriched in sequences from the entire amplified region, whereas the same sequences were very rare in DNA prepared similarly from wild-type cells. After both DNAs were labeled by nick translation, highly repeated sequences were removed by hybridization to immobilized total genomic DNA from wild-type cells. A library of cloned DNA fragments from mutant 165-28 was screened with both probes, and nine independent fragments containing about 165 kilobases of amplified DNA, including the CAD gene, have been isolated so far. These cloned DNAs can be used to study the structure of the amplified region, to evaluate the nature of the amplification event, and to investigate gene expression from the amplified DNA. For example, one amplified fragment included a gene coding for a 3.8-kilobase, cytoplasmic, polyadenylated RNA which was overproduced greatly in cells resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate. The method for cloning amplified DNA is general and can be used to evaluate the possible involvement of gene amplification in phenomena such as drug resistance, transformation, or differentiation. DNA fragments corresponding to any region amplified about 10-fold or more can be cloned, even if no function for the region is known. The method for removing highly repetitive sequences from genomic DNA probes should also be of general use.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (11) ◽  
pp. 2076-2088 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Ardeshir ◽  
E Giulotto ◽  
J Zieg ◽  
O Brison ◽  
W S Liao ◽  
...  

Syrian hamster cell lines selected in multiple steps for resistance to high levels of N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) contain many copies of the gene coding for the pyrimidine pathway enzyme CAD. Approximately 500 kilobases of additional DNA was coamplified with each copy of the CAD gene in several cell lines. To investigate its structure and organization, we cloned ca. 162 kilobases of coamplified DNA from cell line 165-28 and ca. 68 kilobases from cell line B5-4, using a screening method based solely on the greater abundance of amplified sequences in the resistant cells. Individual cloned fragments were then used to probe Southern transfers of genomic DNA from 12 different PALA-resistant mutants and the wild-type parents. A contiguous region of DNA ca. 44 kilobases long which included the CAD gene was amplified in all 12 mutants. However, the fragments cloned from 165-28 which were external to this region were not amplified in any other mutant, and the external fragments cloned from B5-4 were not amplified in two of the mutants. These results suggest that movement or major rearrangement of DNA may have accompanied some of the amplification events. We also found that different fragments were amplified to different degrees within a single mutant cell line. We conclude that the amplified DNA was not comprised of identical, tandemly arranged units. Its structure was much more complex and was different in different mutants. Several restriction fragments containing amplified sequences were found only in the DNA of the mutant cell line from which they were isolated and were not detected in DNA from wild-type cells or from any other mutant cells. These fragments contained novel joints created by rearrangement of the DNA during amplification. The cloned novel fragments hybridized only to normal fragments in every cell line examined, except for the line from which each novel fragment was isolated or the parental population for that line. This result argues that "hot spots" for forming novel joints are rare or nonexistent.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (11) ◽  
pp. 2076-2088
Author(s):  
F Ardeshir ◽  
E Giulotto ◽  
J Zieg ◽  
O Brison ◽  
W S Liao ◽  
...  

Syrian hamster cell lines selected in multiple steps for resistance to high levels of N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) contain many copies of the gene coding for the pyrimidine pathway enzyme CAD. Approximately 500 kilobases of additional DNA was coamplified with each copy of the CAD gene in several cell lines. To investigate its structure and organization, we cloned ca. 162 kilobases of coamplified DNA from cell line 165-28 and ca. 68 kilobases from cell line B5-4, using a screening method based solely on the greater abundance of amplified sequences in the resistant cells. Individual cloned fragments were then used to probe Southern transfers of genomic DNA from 12 different PALA-resistant mutants and the wild-type parents. A contiguous region of DNA ca. 44 kilobases long which included the CAD gene was amplified in all 12 mutants. However, the fragments cloned from 165-28 which were external to this region were not amplified in any other mutant, and the external fragments cloned from B5-4 were not amplified in two of the mutants. These results suggest that movement or major rearrangement of DNA may have accompanied some of the amplification events. We also found that different fragments were amplified to different degrees within a single mutant cell line. We conclude that the amplified DNA was not comprised of identical, tandemly arranged units. Its structure was much more complex and was different in different mutants. Several restriction fragments containing amplified sequences were found only in the DNA of the mutant cell line from which they were isolated and were not detected in DNA from wild-type cells or from any other mutant cells. These fragments contained novel joints created by rearrangement of the DNA during amplification. The cloned novel fragments hybridized only to normal fragments in every cell line examined, except for the line from which each novel fragment was isolated or the parental population for that line. This result argues that "hot spots" for forming novel joints are rare or nonexistent.


1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 308-319
Author(s):  
G M Wahl ◽  
L Vitto ◽  
R A Padgett ◽  
G R Stark

Syrian hamster cells resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA), a specific inhibitor of the aspartate transcarbamylase activity of the multifunctional protein CAD, overproduce this protein as a result of amplification of the CAD gene. We have used a sensitive in situ hybridization technique to localize CAD genomes in spreads of metaphase chromosomes from several independent PALA-resistant lines and from wild-type PALA-sensitive cells. The amplified genes were always found within chromosomes, usually in an expanded region of the short arm of chromosome B9. In wild-type cells, the CAD gene was also on the short arm of chromosome B9. In one mutant line, 90 to 100 CAD genes were found within an expanded B9 chromosome and 10 to 15 more were near the distal end of one arm of several different chromosomes. Another line contained most the genes in a telomeric chromosome or large chromosome fragment. The amplified genes were in chromosomal regions that were stained in a banded pattern by trypsin-Giemsa. A few double minute chromosomes were observed in a very small fraction of the total spreads examined. The it situ hybridizations were performed in the presence of 10% dextral sulfate 500, which increases the signal by as much as 100-fold. Using recombinant DNA plasmids nick-translated with [125I]dCTP to high specific radioactivity, 10 CAD genes in a single chromosomal region were revealed after 1 week of autoradiographic exposure, and the position of the unique gene could be seen after 1 month.


1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-301
Author(s):  
R A Padgett ◽  
G M Wahl ◽  
G R Stark

Two adjacent fragments of genomic DNA spanning the gene for CAD, which encodes the first three enzymes of UMP biosynthesis, were cloned from a mutant Syrian hamster cell line containing multiple copies of this gene. The mutant was selected for resistance to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, a potent and specific inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase, the second enzyme in the pathway. The sizes and positions of about 37 intervening sequences within the 25-kilobase CAD gene were mapped by electron microscopy, and the locations of the 5' and 3' ends of the 7.9-kilobase CAD mRNA were established by electron microscopy and by other hybridization methods. The coding sequences are small (100 to 400 bases), as are most of the intervening sequences (50 to 300 bases). However, there are also several large intervening sequences of up to 5,000 bases each. Two small cytoplasmic polyadenylated RNAs are transcribed from a region just beyond the 5' end of the CAD gene, and their abundance reflects the degree of gene amplification.


1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 308-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
G M Wahl ◽  
L Vitto ◽  
R A Padgett ◽  
G R Stark

Syrian hamster cells resistant to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA), a specific inhibitor of the aspartate transcarbamylase activity of the multifunctional protein CAD, overproduce this protein as a result of amplification of the CAD gene. We have used a sensitive in situ hybridization technique to localize CAD genomes in spreads of metaphase chromosomes from several independent PALA-resistant lines and from wild-type PALA-sensitive cells. The amplified genes were always found within chromosomes, usually in an expanded region of the short arm of chromosome B9. In wild-type cells, the CAD gene was also on the short arm of chromosome B9. In one mutant line, 90 to 100 CAD genes were found within an expanded B9 chromosome and 10 to 15 more were near the distal end of one arm of several different chromosomes. Another line contained most the genes in a telomeric chromosome or large chromosome fragment. The amplified genes were in chromosomal regions that were stained in a banded pattern by trypsin-Giemsa. A few double minute chromosomes were observed in a very small fraction of the total spreads examined. The it situ hybridizations were performed in the presence of 10% dextral sulfate 500, which increases the signal by as much as 100-fold. Using recombinant DNA plasmids nick-translated with [125I]dCTP to high specific radioactivity, 10 CAD genes in a single chromosomal region were revealed after 1 week of autoradiographic exposure, and the position of the unique gene could be seen after 1 month.


1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-301 ◽  
Author(s):  
R A Padgett ◽  
G M Wahl ◽  
G R Stark

Two adjacent fragments of genomic DNA spanning the gene for CAD, which encodes the first three enzymes of UMP biosynthesis, were cloned from a mutant Syrian hamster cell line containing multiple copies of this gene. The mutant was selected for resistance to N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, a potent and specific inhibitor of aspartate transcarbamylase, the second enzyme in the pathway. The sizes and positions of about 37 intervening sequences within the 25-kilobase CAD gene were mapped by electron microscopy, and the locations of the 5' and 3' ends of the 7.9-kilobase CAD mRNA were established by electron microscopy and by other hybridization methods. The coding sequences are small (100 to 400 bases), as are most of the intervening sequences (50 to 300 bases). However, there are also several large intervening sequences of up to 5,000 bases each. Two small cytoplasmic polyadenylated RNAs are transcribed from a region just beyond the 5' end of the CAD gene, and their abundance reflects the degree of gene amplification.


Genetics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 137 (3) ◽  
pp. 867-874
Author(s):  
P A Okubara ◽  
P A Anderson ◽  
O E Ochoa ◽  
R W Michelmore

Abstract As part of our investigation of disease resistance in lettuce, we generated mutants that have lost resistance to Bremia lactucae, the casual fungus of downy mildew. Using a rapid and reliable screen, we identified 16 distinct mutants of Latuca sativa that have lost activity of one of four different downy mildew resistance genes (Dm). In all mutants, only a single Dm specificity was affected. Genetic analysis indicated that the lesions segregated as single, recessive mutations at the Dm loci. Dm3 was inactivated in nine of the mutants. One of five Dm 1 mutants was selected from a population of untreated seeds and therefore carried a spontaneous mutation. All other Dm1, Dm3, Dm5/8 and Dm7 mutants were derived from gamma- or fast neutron-irradiated seed. In two separate Dm 1 mutants and in each of the eight Dm3 mutants analyzed, at least one closely linked molecular marker was absent. Also, high molecular weight genomic DNA fragments that hybridized to a tightly linked molecular marker in wild type were either missing entirely or were truncated in two of the Dm3 mutants, providing additional evidence that deletions had occurred in these mutants. Absence of mutations at loci epistatic to the Dm genes suggested that such loci were either members of multigene families, were critical for plant survival, or encoded components of duplicated pathways for resistance; alternatively, the genes determining downy mildew resistance might be limited to the Dm loci.


Genetics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 164 (4) ◽  
pp. 1345-1353
Author(s):  
Amber K Bowers ◽  
Jennifer A Keller ◽  
Susan K Dutcher

Abstract To take advantage of available expressed sequence tags and genomic sequence, we have developed 64 PCR-based molecular markers in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that map to the 17 linkage groups. These markers will allow the rapid association of a candidate gene sequence with previously identified mutations. As proof of principle, we have identified the genes encoded by the ERY1 and ERY2 loci. Mendelian mutations that confer resistance to erythromycin define three unlinked nuclear loci in C. reinhardtii. Candidate genes ribosomal protein L4 (RPL4) and L22 (RPL22) are tightly linked to the ERY1 locus and ERY2 locus, respectively. Genomic DNA for RPL4 from wild type and five mutant ery1 alleles was amplified and sequenced and three different point mutations were found. Two different glycine residues (G102 and G112) are replaced by aspartic acid and both are in the unstructured region of RPL4 that lines the peptide exit tunnel of the chloroplast ribosome. The other two alleles change a splice site acceptor site. Genomic DNA for RPL22 from wild type and three mutant ery2 alleles was amplified and sequenced and revealed three different point mutations. Two alleles have premature stop codons and one allele changes a splice site acceptor site.


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