Vol. 10, Issue 9, 1414-1420, September 2000
METHODS
Targeted Terminal Deletions as a Tool for Functional Genomics Studies in Plasmodium
Tomasino
Pace,1
Raffaella
Scotti,1
Chris J.
Janse,2
Andrew P.
Waters,2
Cecilia
Birago,1 and
Marta
Ponzi1,3
1 Laboratorio di Biologia Cellulare, Istituto Superiore di
Sanitá, 00161 Rome, Italy, 2 Department of
Parasitology, Leiden University Medical Centre, 2300 RC Leiden, The
Netherlands
We describe a transfection system that induces terminal deletions at
specific chromosome ends in malaria parasites using a linear construct
containing telomeric repeats at one end and plasmodial sequences able
to drive homologous recombination at the other. A site-specific
deletion was generated at one extremity of chromosome 5 of
Plasmodium berghei, which was stably maintained in the
parasite population selected after transfection. The telomeric repeat
array introduced with the construct reached the average length observed in natural telomeres of Plasmodium, indicating that in vivo
telomere addition occurred at the newly formed extremity. The
expression of a mutant dhfr/ts gene conferring pyrimethamine
resistance, used as a selectable marker, was not affected by the
proximity to the telomeric sequences, either in the presence or absence of drug pressure. In addition, no transcriptional silencing was observed on insertion of the mutant dhfr/ts gene either in
subtelomeric or internal positions that are transcriptionally silent in
blood-stage parasites. This suggests that the activity of its promoter
is not affected by the chromatin organization of the chromosomal context.
3
Corresponding author.
10:1414-1420 ©2000 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/00 $5.00