C. elegans ORFeome version 1.1
C. elegans has proved invaluable as a worldwide model
system for studies in developmental genetics and neurobiology. In a
collaborative effort based at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and
Harvard Medical School, Dr Marc Vidal and colleagues (http://vidal.dfci.harvard.edu/) have cloned a
first version (version 1.1) of all predicted protein-coding open
reading frames (ORFs), or the "ORFeome" of Caenorhabditis
elegans. Their effort has resulted in the generation of over
12,000 clones (ORFeome 1.1), of which ~4,000 correspond to genes
that have remained untouched by any cDNA or expressed sequence tag
(EST).
These clones have been produced using InVitrogen Gateway™
recombinational vector system pDONR201. As a starting point, the
researchers designed 19,000 primer pairs by computational methods,
based on gene predictions from one of first drafts of the worm
genome annotation made public in 1999. Gene-specific primer pairs
would amplify all 'splice variants' between the two primers
designed for any gene. Pools of ~50-1,000 transformants for each
set of amplification products were partially sequenced to produce
OSTs (ORF sequence tags). This confirmed gene identity and
permitted identification of pools where at least one processed mRNA
was represented. All the data from this project has been made
available in WorfDB, which integrates with other mapping data ( http://worfdb.dfci.harvard.edu/ ). There is
also a "C elegans ORF Finder" tool
available which allows you to find the location of the clone in the
96-well plates.
Source BioScience LifeSciences offers, for research purposes only,
over 10,500 ORF pools from this collection which can be obtained as
individual pooled clones from a single well, a subset of pools or
the complete set of 114 plates (96-well format).
We can also make subsets of your chosen clones from the
collection. Please contact us
to discuss your requirements.