Deletion of the GAS Regulatory Sequence of IFN- γ Induced Gene(ICAM-1) by Using CRISPR Cas9 to Decrease the Jak3/Stat3Dependent IDO Expression to Repress Tumor Cells Development

Authors

  • Ruoxi Wu Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61173/s2h4pe74

Keywords:

GAS sequence, IDO, IFN-γ, ICAM-1, Jak3/Stat3 pathway, CRISPR, gene knockout

Abstract

IDO is a checkpoint molecule that regulates T-cell proliferation. Since IDO contributes to T cell death and creates an
environment for cancer cells to grow, it is necessary to regulate IDO expression. Previous studies demonstrated that
IFN-gamma-induced genes would indirectly activate IDO expression through the Jak/3 pathway, and ICAM-1 is one
of the IFN-gamma-induced genes. This work investigates the effect of ICAM-1 on IDO expression and the effect of
2 GAS segment knockouts on ICAM-1 expression. CRISPR-Cas9, heat shock transformation, PCR, and restriction
digestion are used to knock out the target sequence (GAS) and insert the successful knocked-out gene into the E. coli.
RT-PCR is utilized to measure the expression level of ICAM-1 and IDO after the introduction of successfully knockedout genes. The possible result of this work presents that both GAS gene knockouts are thriving; the new gene without
GAS – 2787 bps expresses less ICAM-1 protein than the gene without GAS – 115 bps, and ICAM-1 does not affect IDO
expression at all. Results of this work indicate that the GAS sequence that is farther away from the ICAM-1 RBS site
might decrease the ICAM-1 expression level less than does GAS sequence that is nearer to RBS, and ICAM-1 might not
have any direct impact on IDO expression, which means that tumor cell development cannot be inhibited by regulating
ICAM-1 expression. Future studies could research more on functions of IFNgamma-induced genes other than ICAM-1
and their relationships with IDO expression. 

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Published

2023-06-01

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Section

Articles