CSM News Electronic Edition Volume 5, number 6 August 26, 1995 Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been accepted for publication by sending them to CSM-News@worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu. Back issues of CSM-News, the CSM Reference database and other useful information is available by anonymous ftp from worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu [165.124.233.50], via Gopher at the same address, or by World Wide Web at the URL "http://worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu/dicty.html" =========== Abstracts =========== TRAPPING DEVELOPMENTAL PROMOTERS IN DICTYOSTELIUM Wen-Tsan Chang, Julian D. Gross and Peter C. Newell Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QU,UK PLASMID, in press. Summary We have modified the REMI procedure to permit characterisation of the promoters and structural sequences of genes that would be missed by the standard procedure because their disruption produces no obvious phenotype. A vector (designated pPTGal) carrying a promoter-less E. coli lacZ gene was constructed so that expression of lacZ requires insertion into an active host transcription unit. The construct also contains a multiple cloning site (MCS-2) adjacent to the URA gene which permits very efficient restriction enzyme-mediated excision and rescue in E. coli of the 5' region of the inserted vector (excluding the URA gene) together with a segment of 5'-flanking genomic DNA. [Note that with vectors lacking such an internal multiple cloning site, gene rescue requires cutting on both sides of the insertion site, (as for normal REMI). However, in the case of lacZ-containing vectors, very large plasmids are thereby formed that contain (besides the inserted flanking DNA) the complete vector together with the lacZ and URA genes. Although we obtained a number of lacZ-expressing Dictyostelium transformants with such vectors lacking the MCS-2 site, rescue of the plasmids with flanking DNA in E. coli did not prove possible, possibly due to the size of the resulting DNA fragments]. Using the pPTGal vector we have isolated a series of strains in which lacZ is under the control of developmentally activated promoters, including prestalk and prespore cell specific promoters and promoters showing more complex patterns of lacZ activity. We have cloned the 5' flanking DNA adjacent to the insertion site of three of the isolates. Sequencing of the junction between plasmid and host genome has confirmed in-frame fusion with the lacZ gene, and reintroduction of the cloned plasmids into parental cells has shown that the cloned sequences do actually contain the relevant promoters. Not only should this technique be able to detect important developmental genes which are present in more than one copy, or whose function is performed by more than one gene product, it should also give easy access to a wide range of developmentally controlled promoters without the need to have previously identified the cell type specific or developmental genes being regulated. It should, for example, facilitate the characterization of distinct classes of promoter sequences that are controlled by different intercellular effectors such as cyclic AMP, DIF-1 and ammonia. --------------------------------------------------------------------- [End CSM-News, volume 5, number 6]