In vivo measurements reveal a single 5′-intron is sufficient to increase protein expression level in Caenorhabditis elegans

Matthew M. Crane(University of Washington), Bryan Sands(University of Washington), Christian Battaglia(University of Washington), Brock Johnson(University of Washington), Soo Yun(University of Washington), Matt Kaeberlein(University of Washington), Roger Brent(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Alex Mendenhall(University of Washington)
Scientific Reports
June 24, 2019
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

Introns can increase gene expression levels using a variety of mechanisms collectively referred to as Intron Mediated Enhancement (IME). IME has been measured in cell culture and plant models by quantifying expression of intronless and intron-bearing reporter genes in vitro. We developed hardware and software to implement microfluidic chip-based gene expression quantification in vivo. We altered position, number and sequence of introns in reporter genes controlled by the hsp-90 promoter. Consistent with plant and mammalian studies, we determined a single, natural or synthetic, 5'-intron is sufficient for the full IME effect conferred by three synthetic introns, while a 3'-intron is not. We found coding sequence can affect IME; the same three synthetic introns that increase mcherry protein concentration by approximately 50%, increase mEGFP by 80%. We determined IME effect size is not greatly affected by the stronger vit-2 promoter. Our microfluidic imaging approach should facilitate screens for factors affecting IME and other intron-dependent processes.


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