Library construction and evaluation for site saturation mutagenesis
► A site-saturation mutagenesis protocol yielding 27.4±3.0/32 codons in a 95-member library was developed. ► Critical parameters impacting library quality were uncovered and optimized. ► A quantitative method correlating early-stage DNA sequencing data with library quality is described. We developed...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Enzyme and microbial technology 2013-06, Vol.53 (1), p.70-77 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | ► A site-saturation mutagenesis protocol yielding 27.4±3.0/32 codons in a 95-member library was developed. ► Critical parameters impacting library quality were uncovered and optimized. ► A quantitative method correlating early-stage DNA sequencing data with library quality is described.
We developed a method for creating and evaluating site-saturation libraries that consistently yields an average of 27.4±3.0 codons of the 32 possible within a pool of 95 transformants. This was verified by sequencing 95 members from 11 independent libraries within the gene encoding alkene reductase OYE 2.6 from Pichia stipitis. Correct PCR primer design as well as a variety of factors that increase transformation efficiency were critical contributors to the method's overall success. We also developed a quantitative analysis of library quality (Q-values) that defines library degeneracy. Q-values can be calculated from standard fluorescence sequencing data (capillary electropherograms) and the degeneracy predicted from an early stage of library construction (pooled plasmids from the initial transformation) closely matched that observed after ca. 1000 library members were sequenced. Based on this experience, we suggest that this analysis can be a useful guide when applying our optimized protocol to new systems, allowing one to focus only on good-quality libraries and reject substandard libraries at an early stage. This advantage is particularly important when lower-throughput screening techniques such as chiral-phase GC must be employed to identify protein variants with desirable properties, e.g., altered stereoselectivities or when multiple codons are targeted for simultaneous randomization. |
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ISSN: | 0141-0229 1879-0909 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.enzmictec.2013.02.012 |