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Target-selected mutant screen by TILLING in Drosophila
Author(s) -
Sylke Winkler,
Anja Schwabedissen,
Dana Backasch,
Christian Bökel,
Claudia Seidel,
Stefanie Bönisch,
Maximilian Fürthauer,
Antje Kuhrs,
Laura Cobreros,
Michael Brand,
Marcos GonzálezGaitán
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.3721805
Subject(s) - tilling , biology , genetics , gene , mutagenesis , heteroduplex , reverse genetics , mutant , mutation , genomic dna , point mutation , genetic screen , genomic library , dna sequencing , drosophila melanogaster , ethyl methanesulfonate , peptide sequence
The availability of the full Drosophila genomic DNA sequence prompts the development of a method to efficiently obtain mutations in genes of interest identified by their sequence homologies or biochemically. To date, molecularly characterized mutations have been generated in around 6000 of the approximately 15,000 annotated fly genes, of which around one-third are essential for viability. To obtain mutations in essential and nonessential genes of interest, we took a reverse genetics approach, based on the large-scale detection of point mutations by Cel-I-mediated heteroduplex cleavage. A library of genomic DNA from 2086 EMS-mutagenized lines was established. The library was screened for mutations in three genes. A total of 6.1 Mb were screened, and 44 hits were found in two different mutagenesis conditions. Optimal conditions yielded an average of one mutation every 156 kb. For an essential gene tested, five of 25 mutations turned out to cause lethality, confirming that EMS mutagenesis leads to high frequency of gene inactivation. We thereby established that Cel-I-mediated TILLING can be used to efficiently obtain mutations in genes of interest in Drosophila.

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