Abstract

Freshly deposited eggs ofBombyx mori were microinjected with supercoiled plasmid DNA which carried the β-galactosidase coding sequence ofEscherichia coli inserted in place of the coding sequence of theB. mori cytoplasmic actin A3 gene. Transient expression of this fusion gene in the embryo was determined by in situ histochemical detection of enzyme activity. After injection of the plasmid at different stages of embryonic development, β-galactosidase activity depending on the injected DNA was only detected in the vitellophages. This indicates the presence of active transactivators of the actin A3 gene promoter in this cell type. Tissue specificity of the fusion gene expression could be related to the early polyploidization of vitellophages, a process which would favour the stability of the nuclear pool of injected plasmids. The activity of the transgene in vitellophages was detectable at 24-33 h of egg development, the stage presumed for the onset of zygotic gene expression, up to the end of embryogenesis. This gene transfer system is thus promising to analyse thecis regulatory sequences of the actin A3 gene and could be utilized for other ubiquitous genes.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call