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Mol. Cell. Biol., Jan 1998, 198-205, Vol 18, No. 1
M Cross, MC Taylor and P Borst
African trypanosomes undergo antigenic variation of their variant surface
glycoprotein (VSG) coat to avoid being killed by their mammalian hosts. The
active VSG gene is located in one of many telomeric expression sites.
Replacement of the VSG gene in the active site or switching between
expression sites can give rise to a new VSG coat. To study Trypanosoma
brucei VSG expression site inactivation rather than VSG gene switching, it
is useful to have an in vitro negative-selection system independent of the
VSG. We have achieved this aim by using a viral thymidine kinase (TK) gene.
Following integration of the TK gene downstream of the 221a VSG expression
site promoter, transformant cell lines became sensitive to the nucleoside
analog 1-(2- deoxy-2-fluoro-8-D-arabinofuranosyl)-5-iodouracil. These TK
trypanosomes were able to revert to resistance at a rate approaching 10(-5)
per cell per generation. The majority of revertants expressed a new VSG
gene even though there had been no selection against the VSG itself.
Analysis of these switched variants showed that some had shut down TK
expression via an in situ expression site switch. However, most variants
had the complete 221 expression site deleted and another VSG expression
site activated. We speculate that a new VSG expression site cannot switch
on without inactivation of the old site.
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology
Frequent loss of the active site during variant surface glycoprotein expression site switching in vitro in Trypanosoma brucei
Division of Molecular Biology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam.
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