Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.5.1.2 (DNA ligase)
2,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Here, we describe assembly PCR as a method for the synthesis of long DNA sequences from large numbers of oligodeoxyribonucleotides (oligos). The method, which is derived from DNA shuffling [Stemmer, Nature 370 (1994a) 389-391], does not rely on DNA ligase but instead relies on DNA polymerase to build increasingly longer DNA fragments during the assembly process. A 1.1-kb fragment containing the TEM-1 beta-lactamase-encoding gene (bla) was assembled in a single reaction from a total of 56 oligos, each 40 nucleotides (nt) in length. The synthetic gene was PCR amplified and cloned in a vector containing the tetracycline-resistance gene (TcR) as the sole selectable marker. Without relying on ampicillin (Ap) selection, 76% of the TcR colonies were ApR, making this approach a general method for the rapid and cost-effective synthesis of any gene. We tested the range of assembly PCR by synthesizing, in a single reaction vessel containing 134 oligos, a high-molecular-mass multimeric form of a 2.7-kb plasmid containing the bla gene, the alpha-fragment of the lacZ gene and the pUC origin of replication. Digestion with a unique restriction enzyme, followed by ligation and transformation in Escherichia coli, yielded the correct plasmid. Assembly PCR is well suited for several in vitro mutagenesis strategies.
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PMID:Single-step assembly of a gene and entire plasmid from large numbers of oligodeoxyribonucleotides. 759 Mar 20

To explore if DNA linkers with 5'-hydroxyl (OH) ends could be joined by commercial T4 and E. coli DNA ligase, these linkers were synthesized by using the solid-phase phosphoramidite method and joined by using commercial T4 and E. coli DNA ligases. The ligation products were detected by using denaturing PAGE silver stain and PCR method. About 0.5-1% of linkers A-B and E-F, and 0.13-0.5% of linkers C-D could be joined by T4 DNA ligases. About 0.25-0.77% of linkers A-B and E-F, and 0.06-0.39% of linkers C-D could be joined by E. coli DNA ligases. A 1-base deletion (-G) and a 5-base deletion (-GGAGC) could be found at the ligation junctions of the linkers. But about 80% of the ligation products purified with a PCR product purification kit did not contain these base deletions, meaning that some linkers had been correctly joined by T4 and E. coli DNA ligases. In addition, about 0.025-0.1% of oligo 11 could be phosphorylated by commercial T4 DNA ligase. The phosphorylation products could be increased when the phosphorylation reaction was extended from 1 hr to 2 hrs. We speculated that perhaps the linkers with 5'-OH ends could be joined by T4 or E. coli DNA ligase in 2 different manners: (i) about 0.025-0.1% of linkers could be phosphorylated by commercial T4 DNA ligase, and then these phosphorylated linkers could be joined to the 3'-OH ends of other linkers; and (ii) the linkers could delete one or more nucleotide(s) at their 5'-ends and thereby generated some 5'-phosphate ends, and then these 5'-phosphate ends could be joined to the 3'-OH ends of other linkers at a low efficiency. Our findings may probably indicate that some DNA nicks with 5'-OH ends can be joined by commercial T4 or E. coli DNA ligase even in the absence of PNK.
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PMID:Detection of ligation products of DNA linkers with 5'-OH ends by denaturing PAGE silver stain. 2276 47