Abstract

The use of primary somatic cells in nuclear transfer procedure has opened a new opportunity to manipulate domestic animal genomes via homologous recombination. To date, while a few loci have been targeted in somatic cells using similar enrichment strategies as those used in mouse ES cells, there have been problems of low efficiency, mixed targeted and non-targeted cells within a colony and difficulties in cloning the cell after targeting. Utilizing the hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) as a test locus, it was determined that while no targeted colonies were identified using a conventional targeting construct, an average of 1 per million targeted cells were identified when a nuclear localization signal (nls) was added to the construct. When the nls was combined with cell synchronization using a thymidine block, targeting efficiency increased 7-fold. Moreover, the number of random integrants decreased by over 54-fold resulting in a 1:3 targeted to random integration ratio. This method should facilitate the application of homologous recombination to primary somatic cells.

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