Mon9 Apr03:15pm(15 mins)
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Where:
Stream 1 - Edward Llwyd 0.26 Biology Main
Speaker:
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The African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei is coated with a dense layer of antigenically variable Variant Surface Glycoprotein (VSG) when in the bloodstream of the host. Although a single trypanosome has thousands of VSG genes, only one is expressed at a time in a stringently monoallelic fashion from one of about 15 telomeric expression sites (ES)s. The active ES is transcribed by RNA polymerase I (RNA pol I), which normally exclusively transcribes rDNA. ES transcription occurs in an extra-nucleolar body called the Expression Site Body (ESB). In order to investigate the restriction operating on monoallelic exclusion, we have generated cell lines in which the VSG221 and VSGV02 ESs were simultaneously selected for using drug selection markers. In addition, there is an eGFP gene in the VSG221 ES, and an mCherry gene in the VSGV02 ES, allowing ES activity to be monitored using flow cytometry. These ‘double expresser’ (DE) cell lines appear to continuously switch back and forth between the two ESs. We next introduced an RNAi construct into the DE KW01 cell line, allowing inducible knock-down of eGFP and mCherry. This allows us to transiently ‘defluoresce’ the cells and further analyse ES expression using an epitope tagged Pol I subunit or by DNA or RNA FISH experiments.