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Applications of Fluorescence for Detecting Rare Sequence Rearrangements In Vivo
Dominika M Wiktor-Brown, Carrie A Hendricks, Werner Olipitz, Arlin Rogers and Bevin Engelward
volume 5 | issue 23
1 december 2006Pages: 2715 - 2719
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Homologous recombination (HR) is an important pathway for the accurate repair of potentially cytotoxic or mutagenic double strand breaks (DSBs), as well as double strand ends that arise due to replication fork breakdown. Thus, measuring HR events can provide information on conditions that induce DSB formation and replicative stress. To study HR events in vivo, we previously developed Fluorescent Yellow Direct Repeat (FYDR) mice in which a recombination event at an integrated transgene yields a fluorescent signal. Recently, we published an application of these mice demonstrating that fluorescent recombinant cells can be directly detected within intact pancreatic tissue. Here, we show that in situ imaging is a more sensitive method for detecting exposure-induced recombinant cells, yielding statistical significance with smaller cohorts. In addition, we show inter-mouse and gender-dependent variation in transgene expression, examine its impact on data interpretation, and discuss solutions to overcoming the effects of such variation. Finally, we also present data on EYFP expression, showing that several tissues, in addition to the pancreas, may be amenable for in situ detection of recombinant cells in the FYDR mice. The FYDR mice provide a unique tool for identifying genetic conditions and environmental exposures that induce genotoxic stress in a variety of tissues.
Authors
Dominika M Wiktor-Brown
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, MA
Carrie A Hendricks
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, MA
Werner Olipitz
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, MA
Arlin Rogers
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, MA
Bevin Engelward
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cambridge, MA
We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.




