RT Journal A1 Aguiar, João Carlos A1 LaBaer, Joshua A1 Blair, Peter L. A1 Shamailova, Victoria Y. A1 Koundinya, Malvika A1 Russell, Joshua A. A1 Huang, Fengying A1 Mar, Wenhong A1 Anthony, Robert M. A1 Witney, Adam A1 Caruana, Sonia R. A1 Brizuela, Leonardo A1 Sacci, John B. A1 Hoffman, Stephen L. A1 Carucci, Daniel J. T1 High-Throughput Generation of P. falciparum Functional Molecules by Recombinational Cloning JF Genome Research JO Genome Research YR 2004 FD October 15 VO 14 IS 10b SP 2076 OP 2082 DO 10.1101/gr.2416604 UL http://genome.cshlp.org/content/14/10b/2076.abstract AB Large-scale functional genomics studies for malaria vaccine and drug development will depend on the generation of molecular tools to study protein expression. We examined the feasibility of a high-throughput cloning approach using the Gateway system to create a large set of expression clones encoding Plasmodium falciparum single-exon genes. Master clones and their ORFs were transferred en masse to multiple expression vectors. Target genes (n = 303) were selected using specific sets of criteria, including stage expression and secondary structure. Upon screening four colonies per capture reaction, we achieved 84% cloning efficiency. The genes were subcloned in parallel into three expression vectors: a DNA vaccine vector and two protein expression vectors. These transfers yielded a 100% success rate without any observed recombination based on single colony screening. The functional expression of 95 genes was evaluated in mice with DNA vaccine constructs to generate antibody against various stages of the parasite. From these, 19 induced antibody titers against the erythrocytic stages and three against sporozoite stages. We have overcome the potential limitation of producing large P. falciparum clone sets in multiple expression vectors. This approach represents a powerful technique for the production of molecular reagents for genome-wide functional analysis of the P. falciparum genome and will provide for a resource for the malaria resource community distributed through public repositories.