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Dive into the research topics where Leighcraft A. Shakes is active.

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Featured researches published by Leighcraft A. Shakes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Context dependent function of APPb enhancer identified using enhancer trap-containing BACs as transgenes in zebrafish.

Leighcraft A. Shakes; Tennison L. Malcolm; Kevin L. Allen; Supriyo De; Ken R. Harewood; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

An enhancer within intron 1 of the amyloid precursor protein gene (APPb) of zebrafish is identified functionally using a novel approach. Bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) were retrofitted with enhancer traps, and expressed as transgenes in zebrafish. Expression from both transient assays and stable lines were used for analysis. Although the enhancer was active in specific nonneural cells of the notochord when placed with APPb gene promoter proximal elements its function was restricted to, and absolutely required for, specific expression in neurons when juxtaposed with additional far-upstream promoter elements of the gene. We demonstrate that expression of green fluorescent protein fluorescence resembling the tissue distribution of APPb mRNA requires both the intron 1 enhancer and ∼28 kb of DNA upstream of the gene. The results indicate that tissue-specificity of an isolated enhancer may be quite different from that in the context of its own gene. Using this enhancer and upstream sequence, polymorphic variants of APPb can now more closely recapitulate the endogenous pattern and regulation of APPb expression in animal models for Alzheimers disease. The methodology should help functionally map multiple noncontiguous regulatory elements in BACs with or without gene-coding sequences.


BMC Genomics | 2011

Generating libraries of iTol2-end insertions at BAC ends using loxP and lox511 Tn10 transposons

Leighcraft A. Shakes; Gembu Abe; Mugtaba A Eltayeb; Hope M Wolf; Koichi Kawakami; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

BackgroundBacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) have been widely used as transgenes in vertebrate model systems such as mice and zebrafish, for a variety of studies. BAC transgenesis has been a powerful tool to study the function of the genome, and gene regulation by distal cis- regulatory elements. Recently, BAC transgenesis in both mice and zebrafish was further facilitated by development of the transposon-mediated method using the Tol2 element. Tol2 ends, in the inverted orientation and flanking a 1 kb spacer DNA (iTol2), were introduced into the BAC DNA within the bacterial host using recombination of homologous sequences. Here we describe experiments designed to determine if a simpler and more flexible system could modify BACs so that they would be suitable for transgenesis into zebrafish or mouse embryos using the Tol2 transposase.ResultsA new technique was developed to introduce recognition sequences for the Tol2 transposase into BACs in E. coli using the Tn10 transposon vector system. We constructed pTnloxP-iTol2kan and pTnlox511-iTol2kan to introduce the loxP or lox511 site and iTol2 cassette, containing the Tol2 cis-sequences in the inverted orientation, into BACs that have loxP and lox511 sites flanking genomic DNA inserts by Tn10-mediated transposition. The procedure enables rapid generation of a large collection of BACs ready for transgenesis with the iTol2 cassette at the new end of a progressively truncated genomic insert via lox-Cre recombination. The iTol2 ends are efficiently recognized by the Tol2 transposase, and the BACs readily integrate into zebrafish chromosomes.ConclusionThe new technology described here can rapidly introduce iTol2 ends at a BAC end of choice, and simultaneously generate a large collection of BACs with progressive deletions of the genomic DNA from that end in a single experiment. This procedure should be applicable to a wider variety of BACs containing lox sites flanking the genomic DNA insert, including those with sequence repeats. The libraries of iTol2 inserted BACs with truncations from an end should facilitate studies on the impact of distal cis-regulatory sequences on gene function, as well as standard BAC transgenesis with precisely trimmed genes in zebrafish or mouse embryos using Tol2 transposition.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

Minimal cross-recombination between wild-type and loxP511 sites in vivo facilitates truncating both ends of large DNA inserts in pBACe3.6 and related vectors

Leighcraft A. Shakes; Douglas M. Garland; Deepak Srivastava; Ken R. Harewood; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

Contrary to several earlier reports, we find that cross-recombination between wild-type and the mutant loxP511 sites is <0.5% of that between two wild-type sites if Cre protein is expressed by phage P1 during an infection. The finding enabled us to develop a procedure to truncate DNA progressively from both ends of large genomic inserts flanked by these two loxP sites in pBACe3.6 and related vectors with transposons carrying either a wild-type or a loxP511 sequence. Newly constructed loxP511 transposons contained either a kanamycin resistance gene or no marker. Insert DNA ends in deletions were sequenced with primers unique to each transposon-end remaining after the respective recombination. End-sequencing 223 deletions confirmed that the low level of cross-recombination, observed between those sites during the P1 transductions, does not complicate the procedure: truncations from the unintended end of genomic inserts did not occur. Multiple BACs pooled together could also be processed in a single tube to make end-deletions. This deletion technology, utilizing the very minimal cross-recombination between the mutant and wild-type loxP sites of most BAC clones in the public domain and a heterologous one inserted as a transposon, should facilitate functionally mapping long-range gene regulatory sequences and help to isolate genes with defined functional boundaries in numerous projects including those of therapeutic interest.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Using BAC transgenesis in zebrafish to identify regulatory sequences of the amyloid precursor protein gene in humans

Leighcraft A. Shakes; Hansen Du; Hope M Wolf; Charles Hatcher; Derek C. Norford; Patricia Precht; Ranjan Sen; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

BackgroundNon-coding DNA in and around the human Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) gene that is central to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) shares little sequence similarity with that of appb in zebrafish. Identifying DNA domains regulating expression of the gene in such situations becomes a challenge. Taking advantage of the zebrafish system that allows rapid functional analyses of gene regulatory sequences, we previously showed that two discontinuous DNA domains in zebrafish appb are important for expression of the gene in neurons: an enhancer in intron 1 and sequences 28–31 kb upstream of the gene. Here we identify the putative transcription factor binding sites responsible for this distal cis-acting regulation, and use that information to identify a regulatory region of the human APP gene.ResultsFunctional analyses of intron 1 enhancer mutations in enhancer-trap BACs expressed as transgenes in zebrafish identified putative binding sites of two known transcription factor proteins, E4BP4/ NFIL3 and Forkhead, to be required for expression of appb. A cluster of three E4BP4 sites at −31 kb is also shown to be essential for neuron-specific expression, suggesting that the dependence of expression on upstream sequences is mediated by these E4BP4 sites. E4BP4/ NFIL3 and XFD1 sites in the intron enhancer and E4BP4/ NFIL3 sites at −31 kb specifically and efficiently bind the corresponding zebrafish proteins in vitro. These sites are statistically over-represented in both the zebrafish appb and the human APP genes, although their locations are different. Remarkably, a cluster of four E4BP4 sites in intron 4 of human APP exists in actively transcribing chromatin in a human neuroblastoma cell-line, SHSY5Y, expressing APP as shown using chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments. Thus although the two genes share little sequence conservation, they appear to share the same regulatory logic and are regulated by a similar set of transcription factors.ConclusionThe results suggest that the clock-regulated and immune system modulator transcription factor E4BP4/ NFIL3 likely regulates the expression of both appb in zebrafish and APP in humans. It suggests potential human APP gene regulatory pathways, not on the basis of comparing DNA primary sequences with zebrafish appb but on the model of conservation of transcription factors.


RSC Advances | 2013

Identifying Distal cis-acting Gene-Regulatory Sequences by Expressing BACs Functionalized with loxP-Tn10 Transposons in Zebrafish

Pradeep K. Chatterjee; Leighcraft A. Shakes; Hope M. Wolf; Constance Zhou; Charles Hatcher; Derek C. Norford

Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) are large pieces of DNA from the chromosomes of organisms propagated faithfully in bacteria as large extra-chromosomal plasmids. Expression of genes contained in BACs can be monitored after functionalizing the BAC DNA with reporter genes and other sequences that allow stable maintenance and propagation of the DNA in the new host organism. The DNA in BACs can be altered within its bacterial host in several ways. Here we discuss one such approach, using Tn10 mini-transposons, to introduce exogenous sequences into BACs for a variety of purposes. The largely random insertions of Tn10 transposons carrying lox sites have been used to position mammalian cell-selectable antibiotic resistance genes, enhancer-traps and inverted repeat ends of the vertebrate transposon Tol2 precisely at the ends of the genomic DNA insert in BACs. These modified BACs are suitable for expression in zebrafish or mouse, and have been used to functionally identify important long-range gene regulatory sequences in both species. Enhancer-trapping using BACs should prove uniquely useful in analyzing multiple discontinuous DNA domains that act in concert to regulate expression of a gene, and is not limited by genome accessibility issues of traditional enhancer-trapping methods.


Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering | 2014

Long range gene-regulatory sequences identified by transgenic expression of bacterially-engineered enhancer-trap BACs in zebrafish

Hope M Wolf; Kevin O. Nyabera; Katya K. De La Torre; Mugtaba A Eltayeb; Oladoyin Iranloye; Leighcraft A. Shakes; Charles Hatcher; Derek C. Norford; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

Abstract Large pieces of DNA from the chromosomes of numerous organisms, including the human, are faithfully propagated in bacteria as large extra-chromosomal plasmids known as Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs). Because they


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2014

Harnessing mobile genetic elements to explore gene regulation

Leighcraft A. Shakes; Hope M Wolf; Derek C. Norford; Delores J. Grant; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

Sequences that regulate expression of a gene in cis but are located at large distances along the DNA from the gene, as found with most developmentally regulated genes in higher vertebrates, are difficult to identify if those sequences are not conserved across species. Mutating suspected gene-regulatory sequences to alter expression then becomes a hit-or-miss affair. The relaxed specificity of transposon insertions offers an opportunity to develop alternate strategies, to scan in an unbiased manner, pieces of chromosomal DNA cloned in BACs for transcription enhancing elements. This article illustrates how insertions of Tn10 with enhancer-traps into BAC DNA containing the gene, and its germ-line expression in zebrafish, have identified distal regulatory elements functionally. Transposition of Tn10 first introduces the enhancer-trap with a loxP site randomly into BAC DNA. Cre-recombination between the inserted loxP and the loxP endogenous to a BAC-end positions the enhancer-trap to the newly created truncated end of BAC DNA. The procedure generates a library of integration-ready enhancer-trap BACs with progressive truncations from an end in a single experiment. Individual enhancer-trap BACs from the library can be evaluated functionally in zebrafish or mice. Furthermore, the ability to readily alter sequences in a small transposon plasmid containing a regulatory domain of the gene allows re-introduction of altered parts of a BAC back into itself. It serves as a useful strategy to functionally dissect multiple discontinuous regulatory domains of a gene quickly. These methodologies have been successfully used in identifying novel regulatory domains of the Amyloid Precursor Protein (appb) gene in zebrafish, and provided important clues for regulation of the gene in humans.


International Journal of Genomic Medicine | 2014

Trapping Enhancers by Transgenic Expression of BACs Engineered in Bacteria with loxP Transposons

Hope M Wolf; Kevin O. Nyabera; Katya K. De La Torre; Mugtaba A Eltayeb; Leighcraft A. Shakes; Charles Hatcher; Derek C. Norford; Pradeep K. Chatterjee

Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) are large extra-chromosomal plasmids in bacteria that faithfully propagate large pieces of DNA from the chromosomes of organisms. Because they represent tiny contiguous pieces of the chromosome, BACs are ideally suited for expression of genes in their chromosomal contexts. Genes in BACs can be monitored for expression after the DNA is modified with reporter genes and other sequences that allow it to be stably propagated in the new host. Several methods have been developed to alter BAC DNA within its bacterial host. One approach uses Tn10 mini-transposons to introduce exogenous DNA into BACs. The random insertions of Tn10 carrying lox sites have directed mammalian cell-selectable antibiotic resistance genes, enhancer-traps and inverted repeat ends of the vertebrate transposon Tol2 precisely to the ends of genomic DNA inserts in BACs. Reporter gene expression from BAC DNA integrated into zebrafish or mouse chromosomes have resulted from such retrofitting. The methodology has been used extensively to analyze regulation of the Amyloid Precursor Protein (appb) gene in zebrafish. Functional identification of long-range regulatory sequences of appb has provided important clues for regulation of the APP gene in humans.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

Mutually exclusive recombination of wild-type and mutant loxP sites in vivo facilitates transposon-mediated deletions from both ends of genomic DNA in PACs

Pradeep K. Chatterjee; Leighcraft A. Shakes; Deepak Srivastava; Douglas M. Garland; Ken R. Harewood; Kyle J. Moore; Jonathon S. Coren


Analytical Biochemistry | 2004

Selecting transpositions using phage P1 headful packaging: new markerless transposons for functionally mapping long-range regulatory sequences in bacterial artificial chromosomes and P1-derived artificial chromosomes

Pradeep K. Chatterjee; Sushmita Mukherjee; Leighcraft A. Shakes; Willie Wilson; Jonathon S. Coren; Ken R. Harewood; Goldie Byrd

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Pradeep K. Chatterjee

North Carolina Central University

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Derek C. Norford

North Carolina Central University

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Hope M Wolf

North Carolina Central University

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Ken R. Harewood

North Carolina Central University

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Charles Hatcher

North Carolina Central University

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Mugtaba A Eltayeb

North Carolina Central University

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Delores J. Grant

North Carolina Central University

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Tennison L. Malcolm

North Carolina Central University

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Constance Zhou

North Carolina Central University

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