| Literature DB >> 27165317 |
Yan Nie1,2,3, Maxime Chaillet1,2, Christian Becke1,4, Matthias Haffke1,2,5, Martin Pelosse1,2, Daniel Fitzgerald6, Ian Collinson7, Christiane Schaffitzel1,2,7, Imre Berger8,9,10.
Abstract
Multicomponent biological systems perform a wide variety of functions and are crucially important for a broad range of critical health and disease states. A multitude of applications in contemporary molecular and synthetic biology rely on efficient, robust and flexible methods to assemble multicomponent DNA circuits as a prerequisite to recapitulate such biological systems in vitro and in vivo. Numerous functionalities need to be combined to allow for the controlled realization of information encoded in a defined DNA circuit. Much of biological function in cells is catalyzed by multiprotein machines typically made up of many subunits. Provision of these multiprotein complexes in the test-tube is a vital prerequisite to study their structure and function, to understand biology and to develop intervention strategies to correct malfunction in disease states. ACEMBL is a technology concept that specifically addresses the requirements of multicomponent DNA assembly into multigene constructs, for gene delivery and the production of multiprotein complexes in high-throughput. ACEMBL is applicable to prokaryotic and eukaryotic expression hosts, to accelerate basic and applied research and development. The ACEMBL concept, reagents, protocols and its potential are reviewed in this contribution.Keywords: Automation; Gene delivery; High-throughput; Membrane proteins; Metabolic engineering; Protein complexes; Robotics; Structural proteomics; Synthetic biology
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27165317 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-27216-0_3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Exp Med Biol ISSN: 0065-2598 Impact factor: 2.622