Publication | Open Access
Plasmids can stably transform yeast mitochondria lacking endogenous mtDNA.
153
Citations
24
References
1988
Year
EngineeringGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsMitochondrial BiologyRedox BiologyMitochondrial StructureYeastPlasmid DnaDna ReplicationMitochondrial Gene Oxi1Mitochondrial FunctionYeast MitochondriaSynthetic BiologyGenetic EngineeringYeast StrainMicrobiologyMedicineGenome Editing
The mitochondrial gene oxi1, carried on a bacterial plasmid, has been used to transform the mitochondria of a yeast strain lacking mtDNA (rho0). The plasmid DNA behaved in a manner entirely consistent with the known properties of normal yeast rho- mtDNA after its introduction by high-velocity microprojectile bombardment. Like the mtDNA sequences retained in natural rho- strains, the plasmid DNA in the transformants was reiterated into concatemers whose size was indistinguishable from that of wild-type mtDNA. The oxi1 sequences in the transformants were surrounded by restriction sites derived from the plasmid that were not present in wild-type mtDNA. oxi1 genetic information in these "synthetic rho-" strains could be expressed in diploids either after "marker rescue" by recombination with rho+ mtDNA carrying an appropriate oxi1 point mutation or in trans during the growth of diploids heteroplasmic for both the plasmid-derived oxi1 sequences and rho+ mtDNA with oxi1 deleted. The ability to generate such "synthetic rho-" strains by transformation will allow transfer of mutations generated in vitro to wild-type rho+ mtDNA as well as examination of the function of altered genes in trans.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1