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Published June 15, 2008 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

A new method, using cis-regulatory control, for blocking embryonic gene expression

Abstract

Many genes, and particularly regulatory genes, are utilized multiple times in unrelated phases of development. For studies of gene function during embryogenesis, there is often need of a method for interfering with expression only at a specific developmental time or place. Here we show that in sea urchin embryos cis-regulatory control systems which operate only at specific times and places can be used to drive expression of short designed sequences targeting given primary transcripts, thereby effectively taking out the function of the target genes. The active sequences are designed to be complementary to intronic sequences of the primary transcript of the target genes. In this work, the target genes were the transcription factors alx1 and ets1, both required for skeletogenesis, and the regulatory drivers were from the sm30 and tbr genes. The sm30 gene is expressed only after skeletogenic cell ingression. When its regulatory apparatus was used as driver, the alx1 and ets1 repression constructs had the effect of preventing postgastrular skeletogenesis, while not interfering with earlier alx1 and ets1 function in promoting skeletogenic mesenchyme ingression. In contrast, repression constructs using the tbr driver, which is active in blastula stage, block ingression. This method thus provides the opportunity to study regulatory requirements of skeletogenesis after ingression, and may be similarly useful in many other developmental contexts.

Additional Information

© 2008 Elsevier Inc. Received for publication 19 December 2007. Revised 29 February 2008. Accepted 29 February 2008. Available online 14 March 2008. The authors would like to thank R. Andrew Cameron for initial experiments and data analysis and Paola Oliveri for important insights, helpful suggestions, and critical reading of the manuscript. J.S. offers thanks to Andy Ransick for embryo drawings and general help with embryology and microscopy. Research was supported by an NIH grant HD-37105.

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August 22, 2023
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