MBio. 2014 Dec 2;5(6). pii: e02021-14. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02021-14.
Apicomplexa are obligate intracellular parasites that cause important diseases in humans and animals. Manipulating the pathogen genome is the most direct way to understand the functions of specific genes in parasite development and pathogenesis. In Toxoplasma gondii, nonhomologous recombination is typically highly favored over homologous recombination, a process required for precise gene targeting. Several approaches, including the use of targeting vectors that feature large flanks to drive site-specific recombination, have been developed to overcome this problem. We have generated a new large-insert repository of T. gondii genomic DNA that is arrayed and sequenced and covers 95% of all of the parasite's genes. Clones from this fosmid library are maintained at single copy, which provides a high level of stability and enhances our ability to modify the organism dramatically. We establish a robust recombineering pipeline and show that our fosmid clones can be easily converted into gene knockout constructs in a 4-day protocol that does not require plate-based cloning but can be performed in multiwell plates. We validated this approach to understand gene function in T. gondii and produced a conditional null mutant for a nucleolar protein belonging to the NOL1/NOP2/SUN family, and we show that this gene is essential for parasite growth. We also demonstrate a powerful complementation strategy in the context of chemical mutagenesis and whole-genome sequencing. This repository is an important new resource that will accelerate both forward and reverse genetic analysis of this important pathogen.
IMPORTANCE:
Toxoplasma gondii is an important genetic model to understand intracellular parasitism. We show here that large-insert genomic clones are effective tools that enhance homologous recombination and allow us to engineer conditional mutants to understand gene function. We have generated, arrayed, and sequenced a fosmid library of T. gondii genomic DNA in a copy control vector that provides excellent coverage of the genome. The fosmids are maintained in a single-copy state that dramatically improves their stability and allows modification by means of a simple and highly scalable protocol. We show here that modified and unmodified fosmid clones are powerful tools for forward and reverse genetics.
Copyright © 2014 Vinayak et al.
- PMID:
- 25467441
- [PubMed - in process]
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