Mycoplasma-mediated uptake of the exogenous human BRCA1 gene by hatching blastocysts.
PURPOSE: Biological vectors for cell transfection are mainly viral in origin, with inherent shortcomings. Mycoplasmas are ubiquitous organisms that traverse cells easily. The objective was to determine if Ureaplasma urealyticum (T-mycoplasma) would vector exogenous BRCA1 DNA into blastocysts. METHODS: Hatching mouse blastocysts (N = 70) were incubated in the presence of either viable or dead Ureaplasma urealyticum at 37 degrees C for 1 hr. The blastocysts were exposed to human BRCA1 DNA lacking homology in the mouse genome for 2 hr, followed by DNase-1 treatment and wash. Polymerase chain reaction and agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of amplified products were performed. RESULTS: The BRCA1 gene was detected in the blastocysts only when viable Ureaplasma was present. PCR analyses of control Ureaplasma and untreated blastocysts were negative. CONCLUSION: Viable Ureaplasma organisms were shown to mediate the uptake of DNA fragments into blastocysts, resulting in transgenic mouse blastocysts with a normal human BRCA1 exon 11 gene.[1]References
- Mycoplasma-mediated uptake of the exogenous human BRCA1 gene by hatching blastocysts. Chan, P.J., Brossfield, J.E., Patton, W.C., King, A. J. Assist. Reprod. Genet. (1999) [Pubmed]
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