| Literature DB >> 22921067 |
Balint Kintses1, Christopher Hein, Mark F Mohamed, Martin Fischlechner, Fabienne Courtois, Céline Lainé, Florian Hollfelder.
Abstract
We demonstrate the utility of a microfluidic platform in which water-in-oil droplet compartments serve to miniaturize cell lysate assays by a million-fold for directed enzyme evolution. Screening hydrolytic activities of a promiscuous sulfatase demonstrates that this extreme miniaturization to the single-cell level does not come at a high price in signal quality. Moreover, the quantitative readout delivers a level of precision previously limited to screening methodologies with restricted throughput. The sorting of 3 × 10(7) monodisperse droplets per round of evolution leads to the enrichment of clones with improvements in activity (6-fold) and expression (6-fold). The detection of subtle differences in a larger number of screened clones provides the combination of high sensitivity and high-throughput needed to rescue a stalled directed evolution experiment and make it viable.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22921067 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.06.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol ISSN: 1074-5521