First-generation inducible expression
vectors for Trypanosoma brucei utilized a single
tetracycline-responsive promoter to drive expression of an
experimental gene, in tandem with a drug-resistance marker gene to
select for integration (Wirtz E, Clayton CE. Science 1995;
268:1179-1183). Because drug resistance and experimental gene
expression both depended upon the activity of the regulated promoter,
this approach could not be used for inducible expression of toxic
products. We have now developed a dual-promoter approach, for
expressing highly toxic products and generating conditional gene
knock-outs, using back-to-back constitutive T7 and
tetracycline-responsive PARP promoters to drive expression of the
selectable marker and test gene, respectively. Transformants are
readily obtained with these vectors in the absence of tetracycline,
in bloodstream or procyclic T. brucei cell lines co-expressing T7 RNA
polymerase and Tet repressor, and consistently show
tetracycline-responsive expression through a 10(3)-10(4)-fold range.
Uninduced background expression of a luciferase reporter averages no
more than one molecule per cell, enabling dominant-negative
approaches relying upon inducible expression of toxic products. This
tight regulation also permits the production of functional gene
knock-outs through regulated expression of an experimental gene in a
null-mutant background. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights
reserved.