The Tol2kit: A multisite gateway‐based construction kit for <i>Tol2</i> transposon transgenesis constructs

Kristen M. Kwan(University of Utah), E. Fujimoto(University of Utah), Clemens Grabher(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Benjamin D. Mangum(University of Utah), Melissa Hardy(University of Utah), Douglas S. Campbell(University of Utah), John M. Parant(University of Utah), H. Joseph Yost(University of Utah), John P. Kanki(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Chi‐Bin Chien(University of Utah)
Developmental Dynamics
October 15, 2007
Cited by 1,941

Abstract

Transgenesis is an important tool for assessing gene function. In zebrafish, transgenesis has suffered from three problems: the labor of building complex expression constructs using conventional subcloning; low transgenesis efficiency, leading to mosaicism in transient transgenics and infrequent germline incorporation; and difficulty in identifying germline integrations unless using a fluorescent marker transgene. The Tol2kit system uses site-specific recombination-based cloning (multisite Gateway technology) to allow quick, modular assembly of [promoter]-[coding sequence]-[3' tag] constructs in a Tol2 transposon backbone. It includes a destination vector with a cmlc2:EGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein) transgenesis marker and a variety of widely useful entry clones, including hsp70 and beta-actin promoters; cytoplasmic, nuclear, and membrane-localized fluorescent proteins; and internal ribosome entry sequence-driven EGFP cassettes for bicistronic expression. The Tol2kit greatly facilitates zebrafish transgenesis, simplifies the sharing of clones, and enables large-scale projects testing the functions of libraries of regulatory or coding sequences.


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