| Literature DB >> 27219699 |
Tingjian Chen1, Narupat Hongdilokkul1, Zhixia Liu1, Ramkrishna Adhikary1, Shujian S Tsuen1, Floyd E Romesberg1.
Abstract
The PCR amplification of oligonucleotides enables the evolution of sequences called aptamers that bind specific targets with antibody-like affinity. However, in many applications the use of these aptamers is limited by nuclease-mediated degradation. In contrast, oligonucleotides that are modified at their sugar C2' positions with methoxy or fluorine substituents are stable to nucleases, but they cannot be synthesized by natural polymerases. Here we report the development of a polymerase-evolution system and its use to evolve thermostable polymerases that efficiently interconvert C2'-OMe-modified oligonucleotides and their DNA counterparts via 'transcription' and 'reverse transcription' or, more importantly, that PCR-amplify partially C2'-OMe- or C2'-F-modified oligonucleotides. A mechanistic analysis demonstrates that the ability to amplify the modified oligonucleotides evolved by optimizing interdomain interactions that stabilize the catalytically competent closed conformation of the polymerase. The evolved polymerases should find practical applications and the developed evolution system should be a powerful tool for tailoring polymerases to have other types of novel function.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27219699 PMCID: PMC4880425 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427