Literature DB >> 26307251

Phosphorothioate-based DNA recombination: an enzyme-free method for the combinatorial assembly of multiple DNA fragments.

Jan Marienhagen1, Alexander Dennig1, Ulrich Schwaneberg1.   

Abstract

Rational guided generation of protein chimeras has developed into an attractive approach in protein engineering for tailoring catalytic and biophysical properties of enzymes. Combinatorial recombination of structural elements or whole protein domains is still technically challenging due to sequence dependent biases diminishing the overall quality of resulting chimeric libraries. Since methods for generating such libraries are often limited by a low frequency of crossover points and suffer from challenges in handling, we developed the phosphorothioate-based DNA recombination method (PTRec). PTRec is an enzyme-free method and only requires a short stretch of four amino acids that is identical among the proteins to be recombined in order to define a single crossover point. In a PTRec-generated chimeric library that shuffled five domains of phytase using genes from three different species, 88% of 42 randomly picked and sequenced genes were efficiently recombined. Furthermore, PTRec is a technically simple, fast, and reliable method that can be used for domain- and exon-shuffling or recombination of DNA fragments in general.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PTRec; directed evolution; phosphorothioate; protein engineering; recombination

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2012        PMID: 26307251     DOI: 10.2144/000113865

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotechniques        ISSN: 0736-6205            Impact factor:   1.993


  5 in total

1.  Genomic mapping of phosphorothioates reveals partial modification of short consensus sequences.

Authors:  Bo Cao; Chao Chen; Michael S DeMott; Qiuxiang Cheng; Tyson A Clark; Xiaolin Xiong; Xiaoqing Zheng; Vincent Butty; Stuart S Levine; George Yuan; Matthew Boitano; Khai Luong; Yi Song; Xiufen Zhou; Zixin Deng; Stephen W Turner; Jonas Korlach; Delin You; Lianrong Wang; Shi Chen; Peter C Dedon
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2014-06-05       Impact factor: 14.919

2.  Combinatorial optimization of synthetic operons for the microbial production of p-coumaryl alcohol with Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Philana V van Summeren-Wesenhagen; Raphael Voges; Alexander Dennig; Sascha Sokolowsky; Stephan Noack; Ulrich Schwaneberg; Jan Marienhagen
Journal:  Microb Cell Fact       Date:  2015-06-11       Impact factor: 5.328

3.  Testing the causality between CYP9M10 and pyrethroid resistance using the TALEN and CRISPR/Cas9 technologies.

Authors:  Kentaro Itokawa; Osamu Komagata; Shinji Kasai; Kohei Ogawa; Takashi Tomita
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-04-20       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Computer-Assisted Recombination (CompassR) Teaches us How to Recombine Beneficial Substitutions from Directed Evolution Campaigns.

Authors:  Haiyang Cui; Hao Cao; Haiying Cai; Karl-Erich Jaeger; Mehdi D Davari; Ulrich Schwaneberg
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2019-12-03       Impact factor: 5.236

5.  Combinatorial engineering of 1-deoxy-D-xylulose 5-phosphate pathway using cross-lapping in vitro assembly (CLIVA) method.

Authors:  Ruiyang Zou; Kang Zhou; Gregory Stephanopoulos; Heng Phon Too
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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