Literature DB >> 30173770

Multifragment DNA Assembly of Biochemical Pathways via Automated Ligase Cycling Reaction.

Christopher J Robinson1, Mark S Dunstan1, Neil Swainston2, James Titchmarsh3, Eriko Takano1, Nigel S Scrutton1, Adrian J Jervis4.   

Abstract

The microbial production of commodity, fine, and specialty chemicals is a driving force in biotechnology. An essential requirement is to introduce biosynthetic pathways to the target compound(s) into chassis organisms. First suitable enzymes must be selected and characterized, and then genetic pathways must be designed and assembled into suitable expression vectors. The design of these pathways is crucial for balancing the pathway for efficient in vivo activity. This can be achieved through optimization of the pathway regulation by altering transcription and translation rates. The possible permutations of a multigene pathway create a vast design space which is intractable to explore using traditional time-consuming and laborious pathway assembly methods. The advent of multifragment DNA assembly technologies has enabled simultaneous, multiplexed pathway construction allowing an increased capability to sample the design space. Furthermore, the implementation of laboratory automation allows error-reduced, high-throughput (HTP) construction of pathways. In this chapter, we present a workflow that combines automated in silico design of DNA parts followed by pathway assembly using the ligase cycling reaction on robotics platforms, to allow multiplexed assembly of plasmid-borne gene pathways with high efficiency. Details and considerations in designing DNA parts for expression bacterial chassis are discussed followed by laboratory protocols for HTP pathway assembly and screening using robotics platforms. This workflow is employed in the SYNBIOCHEM Synthetic Biology Research Center, providing the capability to assemble over 96 plasmids simultaneously, with over 40% of clones from each assembly harboring the correctly assembled plasmids. This workflow is easy to modify for use in other laboratories and will help to accelerate synthetic biology projects with diverse applications.
© 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Automation; Biochemical pathway; DNA assembly; Synthetic biology

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Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30173770     DOI: 10.1016/bs.mie.2018.04.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Enzymol        ISSN: 0076-6879            Impact factor:   1.600


  2 in total

1.  Engineering Escherichia coli towards de novo production of gatekeeper (2S)-flavanones: naringenin, pinocembrin, eriodictyol and homoeriodictyol.

Authors:  Mark S Dunstan; Christopher J Robinson; Adrian J Jervis; Cunyu Yan; Pablo Carbonell; Katherine A Hollywood; Andrew Currin; Neil Swainston; Rosalind Le Feuvre; Jason Micklefield; Jean-Loup Faulon; Rainer Breitling; Nicholas Turner; Eriko Takano; Nigel S Scrutton
Journal:  Synth Biol (Oxf)       Date:  2020-08-06

2.  Highly multiplexed, fast and accurate nanopore sequencing for verification of synthetic DNA constructs and sequence libraries.

Authors:  Andrew Currin; Neil Swainston; Mark S Dunstan; Adrian J Jervis; Paul Mulherin; Christopher J Robinson; Sandra Taylor; Pablo Carbonell; Katherine A Hollywood; Cunyu Yan; Eriko Takano; Nigel S Scrutton; Rainer Breitling
Journal:  Synth Biol (Oxf)       Date:  2019-10-29
  2 in total

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