Abstract

The susceptibilities of the protozoan parasites Leishmania mexicana and Trypanosoma brucei to the nucleoside antibiotic blasticidin S were assessed. A concentration of 10 microg ml(-1) was sufficient to cause cell death within 72 h of L. mexicana promastigotes and bloodstream forms of T. brucei in vitro. The gene encoding blasticidin S deaminase (BSD) was therefore incorporated into cassettes for targeting to the cysteine proteinase C locus of L. mexicana (CPC::BSD) and the tubulin locus of T. brucei (tub::RAD51-BSR). Following transfection of mutant parasites that contained other well-established selectable marker genes (HYG, NEO, BLE, PAC and SAT), clones resistant to 10 microg ml(-1) blasticidin S were shown by PCR and Southern blotting to have integrated the cassettes by homologous recombination. The results confirm that BSD can be used as a selectable marker gene for targeted chromosomal integration during genetic manipulations of trypanosomatids.

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