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Transgenic mice: generation and husbandry

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Page 1: Transgenic Talk

Transgenic mice: generation and husbandry

Page 2: Transgenic Talk

Transgenic vs. “knock-out”

◗ Transgenic: an organism that has had DNA introduced into one or more of its cells artificially

◗ “transgenic”: DNA is integrated in a random fashion by injecting it into the pronucleus of a fertilized ovum• Random (approx.. 10% disrupt an endogenous

gene important for normal development)• multiple copies

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Transgenic vs. “knock-out”

◗ Transgenic: an organism that has had DNA introduced into one or more of its cells artificially

◗ “transgenic”: DNA is integrated in a random fashion by injecting it into the pronucleus of a fertilized ovum• Random (approx.. 10% disrupt an endogenous

gene important for normal development)• multiple copies

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Transgenic vs. “knock-out”

◗ “knockout”: DNA is introduced first into embryonic stem (ES) cells. ES cells that have undergone homologous recombination are identified and injected into a 4 day old mouse embryo - a blastocyst• targeted insertion

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Transgenic production

◗ Transgenic mice are often generated to

1. characterize the ability of a promoter to direct tissue-specific gene expression• e.g. a promoter can be attached to a reporter

gene such as LacZ or GFP

2. examine the effects of overexpressing and misexpressing endogenous or foreign genes at specific times and locations in the animals

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Brinster's growth hormone mouse

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Trangenic mouse embryo in which the promoter for a gene expressed in neuronal progenitors (neurogenin 1)drives expression of a beta-galactosidase reporter gene. Neural structures expressing the reporter transgene are dark blue-green. (Dr. Anne Calof)

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Tail tip9.5 day embryos - GFP and wt

GFP transgenic mouse (Nagy)

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GFP transgenic mouse (Nagy)

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Planning a Transgenic production mouse colony◗ Mouse strain - popular◗ Colony size

• typical injection 200 embryos (7-10 females s.o.)

• Superovulation efficiency• Parenting suitability• Pseudo-pregs

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Injecting fertilized eggs

◗ The eggs are harvested 0.5 dpc (superovulated or natural matings)

◗ The DNA is usually injected into the male pronucleus

◗ The eggs can be transferred the same day or the next (2-cell) into pseudopregnant female oviducts

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Pronuclear injection

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Implantation of 1 or 2 cell embryos◗ The injected eggs are implanted the same

day or are incubated overnight and implanted the next day

◗ Injected eggs are transferred to the oviduct of a 0.5 dpc pseudopregnant female

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Implanting 1(or 2) cell embryos

1 2

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Implanting 1(or 2) cell embryos (cont.)

3

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Pseudopregnant females and vasectomized males◗ Female mice can be tricked into thinking

they are pregnant◗ A mouse in estrus is mated with a

vasectomized male◗ pseudopregnancy◗ If eggs (blastocysts) implanted will become

truly pregnant and will give birth to live offspring

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Vasectomizing

1 2

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Breeding Tg founders

◗ Individually backcrossed to the strain of choice

◗ DO NOT intercross different founders - each founder results from a separate RANDOM transgene integration even

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Transgenic mice as tools

◗ Study gene function • Many human diseases can be modeled by

introducing the same mutation into the mouse. Intact organism provides a more complete and physiologically relevant picture of a transgene's function than in vitro testing

◗ Drug testing

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Transgenic mice as tools◗ Polio virus receptor◗ Normal mice can't be infected with polio

virus. They lack the cell-surface molecule that, in humans, serves as the receptor for the virus.

◗ Tg mice expressing the human gene for the receptor can be infected by polio virus and even develop paralysis and other pathological changes characteristic of the disease in humans

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Vector design

◗ Recombinant DNA methods: Simple KO• Structural gene desired (e.g. insulin gene) to be

"knocked out" is replaced partly or completely by a positive selection marker. (knock out function!)

• Vector DNA to enable the molecules to be inserted into host DNA molecules

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Typical KO vector

*tk:thymidine kinase

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Embryonic stem cells

◗ Harvested from the inner cell mass of mouse blastocysts

◗ Grown in culture and retain their full potential to produce all the cells of the mature animal, including its gametes

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ES cells growing in culture

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ES cells are transformed◗ Cultured ES cells are exposed to the vector◗ Electroporation punched holes in the walls of the

ES cells◗ Vector in solution flows into the ES cells◗ The cells that don't die are selected for

transformation using the positive selection marker◗ Randomly inserted vectors will be killed by

gancyclovir

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Successfully transformed ES cells are injected into blastocysts

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Implantation of blastocysts

◗ The blastocysts are left to rest for a couple of hours

◗ Expanded blastocysts are transferred to the uterine horn of a 2.5 dpc pseudopregnant female

◗ Max. 1/3 of transferred blasts will develop into healthy pups

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Implanting blastocysts

1 2

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Implanting blastocysts (cont.)

3 4

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Littermates

Black mouse - no apparent ES cell contribution

Chimeric founder - strong ES cellcontribution

Chimeric founder - weaker ES cellcontribution

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Chimeric mouse

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Testing the offspring

◗ A small piece of tissue - tail or ear - is examined for the desired gene

◗ 10-20% will have it and they will be heterozygous for the gene

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Breeding Chimeras (knock-out founder)◗ Chimera - the founder

• germ-line transmission - usually the ES cells are derived from a 129 strain (agouti or white colour) and the ES cells are injected into a C57Bl/6 blastocyst (black). The more that the ES cells contribute to the genome of the mouse, the more the coat colour will be agouti. The chimera mouse is usually “tiger” striped.

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Breeding Chimeras (knock-out founder)cont◗ Males that are 40% to 100% based on

agouti coat colour should be bred◗ Females should not be bred (low incidence

of success) ES cells are male.◗ Breed aggressively- rotate females through

male's cage. If the male produces more than 6 litters without transmitting, not likely to go germline and should be sac'ed

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Knock-out mice as tools◗ If the replacement gene is nonfunctional

(null allele), mating of the heterozygous will produce a strain of "knock-outs' homozygous for the nonfunctional gene (both copies are knocked-out• Find out if the gene is indispensable

(suprisingly many are not!)• "pleiotropic" expression in different tissues in

different ways and at different times in development

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Breeding Transgenics

◗ Most transgenics are bred onto a C57Bl/6 background• standard

◗ BL/6 breeding information• mate 6-8 weeks for best reproductive

performance• replace males when 1 year old

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Breeding Transgenics (cont.)

• Replace females after 6 litters or at 6 months of age

• quick breeding - 1 founder male: 2 females• rotation of females through male cage

◗ Common problems:• female not good mother, check for milk - give

auntie• male cannibalizing litter• fighting (separate) Do not “reunite” males

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Breeding Transgenics (cont)

◗ Stick to schedules or be overwhelmed• strict records (birth, ID, parents)• ID pups• tail tip or collect ear tissue at 2 weeks• try to genotype before weaning • wean only positives, sac negatives (mosaics?)• house male and females separately• mate at 6 weeks

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Housing

◗ Range from conventional to barrier◗ Researcher can usually advise on level of

protection that is appropriate

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Health Monitoring Programs

◗ Costly◗ Monitor health status of colony◗ Long-term savings: time, effort, money◗ Inform investigator (collaborators) of

pathogen status◗ Prevent entry of pathogens◗ Promptly detect and deal/eliminate

pathogen entry

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Health Monitoring Programs

◗ Months of research data may have to be thrown out because of undetected infection• Unfit for research• Data unreliable

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Pathogens

◗ Viral, bacterial, parasitic, and fungal• Sometimes no overt signs• Many alter host physiology - host unsuitable

for many experimental uses

◗ Cures can be bad too!• Parasiticide - Ivermectin - immune system-

modulating activity

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Pathogens (cont):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ Sendai virus

• Mouse, rat, hamsters• One of the most important mouse pathogens• Transmission - contact, aerosol - very

contagious• Clinical signs - generally asymptomatic; minor

effects on reproduction and growth of pups

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Pathogens (cont):Some common pathogens and their effects

• Infected shortly after birth• No carrier state - stop breeding• Altered physiology: as the virus travels down

the resp.. tract -necrosis of airway epithelium, pneumonia in lungs, lesions.

• 129/J and DBA, aged and immunodeficient most susceptible; SJL/J and C57Bl/6 most resistant

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Pathogens (cont):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ Reported effects

• Interference with early embryonic development and fetal growth

• Alterations of macrophage, natural killer (NK) cell, and T- and B-cell function

• Pulmonary hypersensitivity• Isograft rejection• Wound healing

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Pathogens (cont):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ MHV

• Probably most important pathogen of laboratory mice

• Extremely contagious; aerosol, direct contact; fomites

• No carrier state• Clinic state: varies dependent upon MHV and

mouse strains

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects• Diarrhea, poor growth, death• Immunodeficient (e.g. nu/nu) wasting syndrome

-eventual death• Immunocompromised reported effects: necrotic

changes in several organs, including liver, lungs, spleen, intestine, brain, lymph nodes, and bone marrow; differentiation of cells bearing T-lymphocyte markers; altered enzyme activities, bilirubin concentration, enhanced phagocytic activity of macrophages, rejection of xenograft tumors etc. etc. etc.

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ Helicobacter spp

• Genus keeps expanding with discoveries• H. Hepaticus (mice) most prominent• Transmission: direct fecal-oral or fomites• Clinical signs absent in immunocompetent• Immunodeficient - rectal prolapse• Pathological changes: chronic, active hepatitis,

enterocolitis, hepatocellular neoplasms

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects

• Reported effects: confounds carcinogenicity research; gastointestinal system research

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ Oxyuriasis (Pinworms)

• Mouse pinworms (Syphacia obvelata) has been reported to infect humans

• Eggs excreted in faeces, can aerosolize - wide spread environmental contamination

• Infection rate high; infection usually sub clinical

• Athymic (nu/nu) mice are more susceptible

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects

• Few reports documenting the effects of pinworms on research, many consider irrelevant

◗ Acariasis (mites)• Hairless mice not susceptible• Transmission - direct contact• Eradication very labour-intensive

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects

• C57Bl very susceptible• Infestation: asymptomatic or may cause

wasting; scruffiness; pruritus; patchy alopecia; accumulation of fine bran-like material, mostly over affected areas; self-trauma to the point of amputation; and secondary pyoderma

• Pathological changes: hyperkeratosis, erythema, mast cell infiltration, ulcerative dermatitis, splenic lymphoid and lymph node hyperplasia;

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Pathogens (cont.):Some common pathogens and their effects◗ Reported to have caused:

• altered behaviour• selective increases in immunoglobulin G1

(IgG1), IgE, and IgA levels and depletion in IgM and IgG3 levels in serum

• Lymphocytopenia• Granulocytosis• Increased production of IL-4; decreased

production of IL-2

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The End and Good bye!