Abstract
A modified overlap extension technique for the creation of chimeric genes is described: the method consists in three PCR steps. The first step is a conventional PCR reaction, in which oligonucleotide primers are partially complementary at their 5' ends to the adjacent fragments that are fused to create the chimer. The second PCR step consists in the fusion of the PCR fragments generated in the first step using the complementary extremities of the primers. The third step corresponds to the PCR amplification of the fusion product. The final PCR product is a chimeric gene built up with the different amplified PCR fragments. The technique is illustrated by the construction of a chimeric 5- hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin)1B/D receptor by combining one part of the human 5-HT1B (h5-HT1B) and two parts of the h5-HT1D receptor gene. The chimeric gene expressed in Cos-7 cells yielded similar binding properties as the wild type h5-HT1D receptor. © Rapid Science Ltd. 1998
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