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      A homozygous mutant embryonic stem cell bank applicable for phenotype-driven genetic screening.

      Nature Methods
      Animals, Biological Specimen Banks, Embryonic Stem Cells, cytology, metabolism, Genomics, Gentamicins, pharmacology, Homozygote, Mice, Mutation, genetics, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase, Non-Receptor Type 11, Proteins, Puromycin, RNA-Binding Proteins, Tissue Banks

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          Abstract

          Genome-wide mutagenesis in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) is a powerful tool, but the diploid nature of the mammalian genome hampers its application for recessive genetic screening. We have previously reported a method to induce homozygous mutant ESCs from heterozygous mutants by tetracycline-dependent transient disruption of the Bloom's syndrome gene. However, we could not purify homozygous mutants from a large population of heterozygous mutant cells, limiting the applications. Here we developed a strategy for rapid enrichment of homozygous mutant mouse ESCs and demonstrated its feasibility for cell-based phenotypic analysis. The method uses G418-plus-puromycin double selection to enrich for homozygotes and single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis for identification of homozygosity. We combined this simple approach with gene-trap mutagenesis to construct a homozygous mutant ESC bank with 138 mutant lines and demonstrate its use in phenotype-driven genetic screening.

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