Site-specific DNA recombination in mammalian cells by the Cre recombinase of bacteriophage P1.

B Sauer, N Henderson - Proceedings of the National …, 1988 - National Acad Sciences
B Sauer, N Henderson
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988National Acad Sciences
The Cre protein encoded by the coliphage P1 is a 38-kDa protein that efficiently promotes
both intra-and intermolecular synapsis and recombination of DNA both in Escherichia coli
and in vitro. Recombination occurs at a specific site, called lox, and does not require any
other protein factors. The Cre protein is shown here also to be able to cause synapsis of
DNA and site-specific recombination in a mammalian cell line. A stable mouse cell line was
established that expresses the Cre protein under the control of the Cd2+-inducible …
The Cre protein encoded by the coliphage P1 is a 38-kDa protein that efficiently promotes both intra- and intermolecular synapsis and recombination of DNA both in Escherichia coli and in vitro. Recombination occurs at a specific site, called lox, and does not require any other protein factors. The Cre protein is shown here also to be able to cause synapsis of DNA and site-specific recombination in a mammalian cell line. A stable mouse cell line was established that expresses the Cre protein under the control of the Cd2+-inducible metallothionein I gene promoter. DNA recombination was monitored with DNA substrates containing two directly repeated lox sites. One such substrate is a circular plasmid with two directly repeated lox sites (lox2) flanking a marker gene and was introduced into cells by Ca3(PO4)2 transformation. As a second substrate we used a pseudorabies virus (a herpesvirus) containing a lox2 insertion designed to provide a sensitive detection system for recombination. In both cases, site-specific recombination in vivo is dependent on the presence of the Cre protein and occurs specifically at the 34-base-pair lox sites. These results demonstrate the controlled site-specific synapsis of DNA and recombination by a prokaryotic protein in mammalian cells and suggest that Cre-mediated site-specific recombination may be a useful tool for understanding and modulating genome rearrangements in eukaryotes.
National Acad Sciences