Ligand-activated site-specific recombination in mice.

R Feil, J Brocard, B Mascrez… - Proceedings of the …, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
R Feil, J Brocard, B Mascrez, M LeMeur, D Metzger, P Chambon
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996National Acad Sciences
Current mouse gene targeting technology is unable to introduce somatic mutations at a
chosen time and/or in a given tissue. We report here that conditional site-specific
recombination can be achieved in mice using a new version of the Cre/lox system. The Cre
recombinase has been fused to a mutated ligand-binding domain of the human estrogen
receptor (ER) resulting in a tamoxifen-dependent Cre recombinase, Cre-ERT, which is
activated by tamoxifen, but not by estradiol. Transgenic mice were generated expressing …
Current mouse gene targeting technology is unable to introduce somatic mutations at a chosen time and/or in a given tissue. We report here that conditional site-specific recombination can be achieved in mice using a new version of the Cre/lox system. The Cre recombinase has been fused to a mutated ligand-binding domain of the human estrogen receptor (ER) resulting in a tamoxifen-dependent Cre recombinase, Cre-ERT, which is activated by tamoxifen, but not by estradiol. Transgenic mice were generated expressing Cre-ERT under the control of a cytomegalovirus promoter. We show that excision of a chromosomally integrated gene flanked by loxP sites can be induced by administration of tamoxifen to these transgenic mice, whereas no excision could be detected in untreated animals. This conditional site-specific recombination system should allow the analysis of knockout phenotypes that cannot be addressed by conventional gene targeting.
National Acad Sciences