Brian Lee Sauer
DuPont
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Featured researches published by Brian Lee Sauer.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1990
Joan T. Odell; Perry G. Caimi; Brian Lee Sauer; Sandra Hoff Russell
SummaryThe plant genome responds to the bacteriophage P1-derived loxP-Cre site-specific recombination system. Recombination took place at loxP sites stably integrated in the tobacco genome, indicating that the Cre recombinase protein, expressed by a chimeric gene also stably resident in the genome, was able to enter the nucleus and to locate a specific 34 bp DNA sequence. An excisional recombination event was monitored by the acquisition of kanamycin resistance, which resulted from the loss of a polyadenylation signal sequence that interrupted a chimeric neomycin phosphotransferase 11 gene. Molecular analysis confirmed that the excision had occurred. Recombination occurred when plants with the integrated loxP construction were stably re-transformed with a chimeric cre gene and when plants with the introduced loxP construction were cross-bred with those carrying the chimeric cre gene. As assayed phenotypically, site-specific recombination could be detected in 50%–100% of the plants containing both elements of the system. Kanamycin resistance was detected at 2–3 weeks after re-transformation and in the first leaf of hybrid seedlings. This demonstration of the effectiveness of the loxP-Cre system in plants provides the basis for development of this system for such purposes as directing site-specific integration and regulation of gene expression.
Gene | 1988
Brian Lee Sauer; Nancy L. Henderson
The efficiency with which linearized plasmid DNA can transform competent Escherichia coli can be significantly increased by use of the Cre-lox site-specific recombination system of phage P1. Linear plasmid molecules containing directly repeated loxP sites (lox2 plasmids) are cyclized in Cre+ E. coli strains after introduction either by transformation or by mini-Mu transduction. Exonuclease V activity of the RecBC enzyme inhibits efficient cyclization of linearized lox2 plasmids after transformation. By use of E. coli mutants which lack exonuclease V activity, Cre-mediated cyclization results in transformation efficiencies for linearized lox2 plasmids identical to those obtained with covalently closed circular plasmid DNA. Moreover, Cre+ E. coli recBC strains allow the efficient recovery of lox2 plasmids integrated within large linear DNA molecules such as the 150-kb genome of pseudorabies virus.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1992
Karen Skorupski; James C. Pierce; Brian Lee Sauer; Nat Sternberg
The packaging of bacteriophage P1 DNA is initiated by cleavage of the viral DNA at a specific site, designated pac. The proteins necessary for that cleavage, and the genes that encode those proteins, are described in this report. By sequencing wild-type P1 DNA and DNA derived from various P1 amber mutants that are deficient in pac cleavage, two distinct genes, referred to as pacA and pacB, were identified. These genes appear to be coordinately transcribed with an upstream P1 gene that encodes a regulator of late P1 gene expression (gene 10). pacA is located upstream from pacB and contains the 161 base-pair pac cleavage site. The predicted sizes of the PacA and PacB proteins are 45 kDa and 56 kDa, respectively. These proteins have been identified on SDS-polyacrylamide gels using extracts derived from Escherichia coli cells that express these genes under the control of a bacteriophage T7 promoter. Extracts prepared from cells expressing both PacA and PacB are proficient for site-specific cleavage of the P1 packaging site, whereas those lacking either protein are not. However, the two defective extracts can complement each other to restore functional pac cleavage activity. Thus, PacA and PacB are two essential bacteriophage proteins required for recognition and cleavage of the P1 packaging site. PacB extracts also contain a second P1 protein that is encoded within the pacB gene. We have identified this protein on SDS-polyacrylamide gels and have shown that it is translated in the same reading frame as is PacB. Its role, if any, in pac cleavage is yet to be determined.
Nucleic Acids Research | 1989
Brian Lee Sauer; Nancy L. Henderson
Archive | 1994
Joan T. Odell; Sandra Hoff Russell; Brian Lee Sauer; Francis C. Hsu; Jennie Bih-Jien Shen
Archive | 1992
Nat Sternberg; Brian Lee Sauer
Archive | 1988
Lynn W. Enquist; Alan Keith Robbins; Brian Lee Sauer; Mary Elaine Whealy
Archive | 1986
Brian Lee Sauer
Archive | 1989
Nat Sternberg; Brian Lee Sauer
Nucleic Acids Research | 1989
James Ruether; Brian Lee Sauer