Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Jul 2023)

Targeted mutagenesis and high-throughput screening of diversified gene and promoter libraries for isolating gain-of-function mutations

  • Herbert M. Huttanus,
  • Herbert M. Huttanus,
  • Ellin-Kristina H. Triola,
  • Ellin-Kristina H. Triola,
  • Jeanette C. Velasquez-Guzman,
  • Jeanette C. Velasquez-Guzman,
  • Sang-Min Shin,
  • Sang-Min Shin,
  • Rommel S. Granja-Travez,
  • Rommel S. Granja-Travez,
  • Anmoldeep Singh,
  • Taraka Dale,
  • Taraka Dale,
  • Taraka Dale,
  • Ramesh K. Jha,
  • Ramesh K. Jha,
  • Ramesh K. Jha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2023.1202388
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Targeted mutagenesis of a promoter or gene is essential for attaining new functions in microbial and protein engineering efforts. In the burgeoning field of synthetic biology, heterologous genes are expressed in new host organisms. Similarly, natural or designed proteins are mutagenized at targeted positions and screened for gain-of-function mutations. Here, we describe methods to attain complete randomization or controlled mutations in promoters or genes. Combinatorial libraries of one hundred thousands to tens of millions of variants can be created using commercially synthesized oligonucleotides, simply by performing two rounds of polymerase chain reactions. With a suitably engineered reporter in a whole cell, these libraries can be screened rapidly by performing fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). Within a few rounds of positive and negative sorting based on the response from the reporter, the library can rapidly converge to a few optimal or extremely rare variants with desired phenotypes. Library construction, transformation and sequence verification takes 6–9 days and requires only basic molecular biology lab experience. Screening the library by FACS takes 3–5 days and requires training for the specific cytometer used. Further steps after sorting, including colony picking, sequencing, verification, and characterization of individual clones may take longer, depending on number of clones and required experiments.

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