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Construction of a mutant library of horseradish peroxidase gene by directed evolution and development of an in situ screening method
Author(s) -
Fernando Mendive,
María Mercedes Segura,
Héctor M. Targovnik,
Osvaldo Cascone,
Magdalena Miranda
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
brazilian journal of chemical engineering/brazilian journal of chemical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.313
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1678-4383
pISSN - 0104-6632
DOI - 10.1590/s0104-66322003000100007
Subject(s) - horseradish peroxidase , microbiology and biotechnology , dna shuffling , mutant , chemistry , agarose , primer (cosmetics) , agarose gel electrophoresis , amplicon , directed evolution , dna , chromatography , polymerase chain reaction , biology , gene , biochemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry
A process of directed evolution applied to obtain a library of mutants of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) enzyme is described. We have introduced slight variations into the original DNA shuffling protocol. A DNA template was prepared by PCR amplification and digested with Dnase I during 1 hour. Dnase I products were concentrated by precipitation with isopropanol. Gel electrophoresis showed fragments of the desired size range (20-600 pb) without a full-length template remaining in the reaction mixture. A high concentration of fragments was crucial for performing PCR without primers. In this case, a template concentration of 32.5 ng/mu l was appropriate. Amplification of recombinant genes in a standard PCR reaction (template dilution 1:100) produced a smear with a low yield for the full-length sequence. A single product of the correct size was obtained by PCR with nested primers separated from the previously used primers by 40 pb. In our laboratory, native HRP has been functionally expressed in a baculovirus expression vector system. The purpose is to develop the screening of the first generation of random mutants in this system. To facilitate detection of those clones that have high peroxidase activity, we developed a rapid method: after five days postinfection agarose plates with six wells were covered with DAB (3,3´-diaminobenzidine) and H2O2. The appearance of brown-black stain allows visualization of up to 100 active clones/well in only 1 min

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