A genomic approach to gene fusion technology

  1. Tina K. Van Dyk*,,
  2. Yan Wei*,,
  3. Michael K. Hanafey§,
  4. Maureen Dolan§,
  5. Mary Jane G. Reeve*,
  6. J. Antoni Rafalski§,
  7. Lucia B. Rothman-Denes, and
  8. Robert A. LaRossa*
  1. *DuPont Company, Biochemical Sciences and Engineering, Wilmington, DE 19880; §DuPont Agricultural Enterprise, Genome Science, Newark, DE 19714; and Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637
  1. Communicated by Dieter Söll, Yale University, New Haven, CT (received for review November 3, 2000)

Abstract

Gene expression profiling provides powerful analyses of transcriptional responses to cellular perturbation. In contrast to DNA array-based methods, reporter gene technology has been underused for this application. Here we describe a genomewide, genome-registered collection of Escherichia coli bioluminescent reporter gene fusions. DNA sequences from plasmid-borne, random fusions of E. coli chromosomal DNA to a Photorhabdus luminescens luxCDABE reporter allowed precise mapping of each fusion. The utility of this collection covering about 30% of the transcriptional units was tested by analyzing individual fusions representative of heat shock, SOS, OxyR, SoxRS, and cya/crp stress-responsive regulons. Each fusion strain responded as anticipated to environmental conditions known to activate the corresponding regulatory circuit. Thus, the collection mirrors E. coli's transcriptional wiring diagram. This genomewide collection of gene fusions provides an independent test of results from other gene expression analyses. Accordingly, a DNA microarray-based analysis of mitomycin C-treated E. coli indicated elevated expression of expected and unanticipated genes. Selected luxCDABE fusions corresponding to these up-regulated genes were used to confirm or contradict the DNA microarray results. The power of partnering gene fusion and DNA microarray technology to discover promoters and define operons was demonstrated when data from both suggested that a cluster of 20 genes encoding production of type I extracellular polysaccharide in E. coli form a single operon.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: DuPont Company, Biochemical Sciences and Engineering, Experimental Station E173/216, Wilmington, DE 19880-0173. E-mail: Tina.K.Van-Dyk{at}usa.dupont.com.

  • Present address: Blackstone Technology Group, Boston, MA 02110.

  • Abbreviations:
    cfu,
    colony-forming unit;
    RLU,
    relative light units
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