Selecting Transgenic Mosquito Larvae with Puromycin
- CNRS UPR9022, INSERM U1257, Institut de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Université de Strasbourg, 67000 Strasbourg, France
- ↵1Correspondence: e.marois{at}unistra.fr
Abstract
The selection of mosquito transgenic larvae using a nonfluorescent approach can be advantageous to reserve fluorophores for downstream applications, such as immunostaining or for the study of promoter activity by cloning a fluorescence reporter gene under the control of that promoter. We previously reported that puromycin selection is efficient in transgenic Anopheles gambiae or Anopheles coluzzii larvae expressing an OpIE2-pac selection marker. A concentration of puromycin of >10 µg/mL is lethal for Anopheles larvae, unless they carry the resistance gene, conferring them resistance to puromycin concentrations of 25–80 µg/mL. A drawback of this fully dominant selection marker is that, unlike with fluorescence markers, homozygous transgenics cannot be distinguished from heterozygotes. Here, we outline the procedure for selecting puromycin-resistant transgenic Anopheles larvae.
Footnotes
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From the Mosquitoes collection, edited by Laura B. Duvall and Benjamin J. Matthews.










