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Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes

Restriction enzymes that recognize specific sequences but cleave unknown sequence outside the recognition site are extensively utilized tools in molecular biology. Despite this, systematic functional categorization of cleavage performance has largely been lacking. We established a simple and automat...

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Autores principales: Lundin, Sverker, Jemt, Anders, Terje-Hegge, Finn, Foam, Napoleon, Pettersson, Erik, Käller, Max, Wirta, Valtteri, Lexow, Preben, Lundeberg, Joakim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4309577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25629514
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117059
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author Lundin, Sverker
Jemt, Anders
Terje-Hegge, Finn
Foam, Napoleon
Pettersson, Erik
Käller, Max
Wirta, Valtteri
Lexow, Preben
Lundeberg, Joakim
author_facet Lundin, Sverker
Jemt, Anders
Terje-Hegge, Finn
Foam, Napoleon
Pettersson, Erik
Käller, Max
Wirta, Valtteri
Lexow, Preben
Lundeberg, Joakim
author_sort Lundin, Sverker
collection PubMed
description Restriction enzymes that recognize specific sequences but cleave unknown sequence outside the recognition site are extensively utilized tools in molecular biology. Despite this, systematic functional categorization of cleavage performance has largely been lacking. We established a simple and automatable model system to assay cleavage distance variation (termed slippage) and the sequence dependence thereof. We coupled this to massively parallel sequencing in order to provide sensitive and accurate measurement. With this system 14 enzymes were assayed (AcuI, BbvI, BpmI, BpuEI, BseRI, BsgI, Eco57I, Eco57MI, EcoP15I, FauI, FokI, GsuI, MmeI and SmuI). We report significant variation of slippage ranging from 1–54%, variations in sequence context dependence, as well as variation between isoschizomers. We believe this largely overlooked property of enzymes with shifted cleavage would benefit from further large scale classification and engineering efforts seeking to improve performance. The gained insights of in-vitro performance may also aid the in-vivo understanding of these enzymes.
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spelling pubmed-43095772015-02-06 Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes Lundin, Sverker Jemt, Anders Terje-Hegge, Finn Foam, Napoleon Pettersson, Erik Käller, Max Wirta, Valtteri Lexow, Preben Lundeberg, Joakim PLoS One Research Article Restriction enzymes that recognize specific sequences but cleave unknown sequence outside the recognition site are extensively utilized tools in molecular biology. Despite this, systematic functional categorization of cleavage performance has largely been lacking. We established a simple and automatable model system to assay cleavage distance variation (termed slippage) and the sequence dependence thereof. We coupled this to massively parallel sequencing in order to provide sensitive and accurate measurement. With this system 14 enzymes were assayed (AcuI, BbvI, BpmI, BpuEI, BseRI, BsgI, Eco57I, Eco57MI, EcoP15I, FauI, FokI, GsuI, MmeI and SmuI). We report significant variation of slippage ranging from 1–54%, variations in sequence context dependence, as well as variation between isoschizomers. We believe this largely overlooked property of enzymes with shifted cleavage would benefit from further large scale classification and engineering efforts seeking to improve performance. The gained insights of in-vitro performance may also aid the in-vivo understanding of these enzymes. Public Library of Science 2015-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4309577/ /pubmed/25629514 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117059 Text en © 2015 Lundin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lundin, Sverker
Jemt, Anders
Terje-Hegge, Finn
Foam, Napoleon
Pettersson, Erik
Käller, Max
Wirta, Valtteri
Lexow, Preben
Lundeberg, Joakim
Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title_full Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title_fullStr Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title_full_unstemmed Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title_short Endonuclease Specificity and Sequence Dependence of Type IIS Restriction Enzymes
title_sort endonuclease specificity and sequence dependence of type iis restriction enzymes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4309577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25629514
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117059
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