Creation of a GAL4/UAS-Coupled Inducible Gene
Expression System for Use in Drosophila Cultured
Cell Lines
Kristin M. Klueg,
1
Diego Alvarado,
1
Marc A.T. Muskavitch,
2
and Joseph B. Duffy
1
*
1
Biology Department, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana
2
Biology Department, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Received 10 July 2002; Accepted 31 July 2002
The usefulness of the GAL4/UAS system as a tool for
targeted gene expression in Drosophila melanogaster
has been widely recognized (Duffy, 2002, this issue). By
combining tissue-specific GAL4 drivers with stably inte-
grated pUAST-based responder constructs, the GAL4/
UAS system (Brand and Perrimon, 1993) transformed
gene misexpression into an even more precise and pow-
erful tool for functional analysis.
Over the past 30 years, the versatility of Drosophila as
a model organism has been extended as well by the
development of cultured cell lines from a variety wild-
type and mutant fly strains and a variety of tissues within
those strains (Cherbas and Cherbas, 1998). Traditionally,
regulated gene expression in Drosophila cultured cell
lines has been achieved by placing coding sequences of
interest under direct control of a constitutive promoter,
such as pAct5C from the actin5C gene (e.g., Krasnow et
al., 1989), or an inducible promoter, such as pMT from
the metallothionein (mt) gene (Bunch et al., 1988), to
create “direct-drive” systems. Because endogenous mt
gene expression is the result of a systemic response to
heavy metal toxicity in Drosophila (Maroni et al., 1987),
inducible mt gene expression can be achieved by the
introduction of heavy metals, normally copper ion
(Cu
++
) in the form of copper sulfate, into transiently or
stably transfected cell lines (Bunch et al., 1988).
The first approach to adapting the GAL4/UAS system
for use in Drosophila cultured cell lines involved co-
transfection of constructs that encoded specific proteins
of interest under control of the GAL4-responsive UAS
cassette with a constitutive GAL4 driver (e.g., under
control of the armadillo promoter, our unpublished
results, or the act5C promoter, Johnson et al., 2000) to
create a more flexible “indirect-drive” system. We have
taken this system another step forward, introducing in-
ducibility by placing GAL4 expression under control of
the mt promoter in the widely used vector pRMHa-3
(Bunch et al., 1988; “pMT” hereafter). Through the use
of this pMT:GAL4 construct and constructs that encode
components of the Drosophila Notch (reviewed in
Baron et al., 2002) and EGF receptor (dEGFR1, reviewed
in Klambt, 2000) signal transduction pathways, we dem-
onstrate that the GAL4/UAS system can be employed to
craft inducible protein expression in Drosophila cell
lines. This approach also benefits from the growing
library of pUAST responder constructs available for the
engineering of regulated gene expression in Drosophila.
The use of an inducible GAL4/UAS system in cultured
cells will provide control over the levels and timing of
expression, allowing for lower expression of proteins
that may cause toxicity when constitutively expressed.
We used expression constructs encoding the wild-
type Delta protein (DeltaWT; Kopczynski et al., 1988)
and a constitutively active form of the Notch protein
(NotchICD; Fortini et al., 1993) to compare the efficacy
of the “indirect-drive” pMT:GAL4/pUAST system we
have developed with that of the “direct-drive” pMT ex-
pression system (Bunch et al., 1988). The pMT:DeltaWT
and pMT:NotchICD constructs have been used exten-
sively in Drosophila cultured cells to study Delta–Notch
interactions and downstream signaling events (Fehon et
al., 1990; Klueg et al., 1998; Klueg and Muskavitch,
1999; Lieber et al., 2002). The pMT:DeltaWT or pMT:
GAL4 and pUAST:DeltaWT constructs were transfected
into Drosophila S3 cells, continuously induced, and lev-
els of protein expression were assayed over time by
Western blot analysis (Fig. 1). We found that when
equimolar amounts of Delta-encoding constructs were
used, expression levels driven by pMT:DeltaWT were
higher than those driven by pMT:GAL4/pUAST:DeltaWT
(Fig. 1). At 2 h postinduction, expression based on pMT:
DeltaWT was detected in 4% of the cells and expression
based on pMT:GAL4/pUAST:DeltaWT was seen in 2% of
cells transiently transfected. By 8 h postinduction, these
percentages increased to 11% for pMT:DeltaWT and 4%
for pMT:GAL4/pUAST:DeltaWT (unpubl. obs.). Expres-
sion based on either construct set was easily detected by
immunohistochemistry at 8 h postinduction (Fig. 3A,B).
To confirm that the lower levels of expression using
pMT:GAL4/pUAST:DeltaWT are inherent characteristics
* Correspondence to: J.B. Duffy, Department of Biology, Indiana Univer-
sity, 1001 E. 3rd Street, Bloomington, IN 47405.
E-mail: jduffy@bio.indiana.edu
Contract grant sponsor: NIH, Contract grant number: GM33291 (to
M.A.T.M.).
Published online 00 Month 2002 in
Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com)
DOI: 10.1002/gene.10148
© 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. genesis 34:119 –122 (2002)