Abstract
BackgroundMutagenesis plays an essential role in molecular biology and biochemistry. It has also been used in enzymology and protein science to generate proteins which are more tractable for biophysical techniques. The ability to quickly and specifically mutate a residue(s) in protein is important for mechanistic and functional studies. Although many site-directed mutagenesis methods have been developed, a simple, quick and multi-applicable method is still desirable.ResultsWe have developed a site-directed plasmid mutagenesis protocol that preserved the simple one step procedure of the QuikChange™ site-directed mutagenesis but enhanced its efficiency and extended its capability for multi-site mutagenesis. This modified protocol used a new primer design that promoted primer-template annealing by eliminating primer dimerization and also permitted the newly synthesized DNA to be used as the template in subsequent amplification cycles. These two factors we believe are the main reasons for the enhanced amplification efficiency and for its applications in multi-site mutagenesis.ConclusionOur modified protocol significantly increased the efficiency of single mutation and also allowed facile large single insertions, deletions/truncations and multiple mutations in a single experiment, an option incompatible with the standard QuikChange™. Furthermore the new protocol required significantly less parental DNA which facilitated the DpnI digestion after the PCR amplification and enhanced the overall efficiency and reliability. Using our protocol, we generated single site, multiple single-site mutations and a combined insertion/deletion mutations. The results demonstrated that this new protocol imposed no additional reagent costs (beyond basic QuikChange™) but increased the overall success rates.
Highlights
Mutagenesis plays an essential role in molecular biology and biochemistry
As a result of this research, we have modified the sitedirected mutagenesis protocol which increased the efficiency for single- and multiple-site mutations and enabled facile large single insertions and deletions/truncations in a single experiment, an option incompatible with the standard QuikChangeTM protocol or with the protocols reported previously [8,12,13,17,19,25,26,27]
This single-step protocol utilized a new primer designing scheme and required significantly less parental DNA which facilitated its digestion after the PCR and enhanced the overall efficiency and reliability
Summary
Mutagenesis plays an essential role in molecular biology and biochemistry. It has been used in enzymology and protein science to generate proteins which are more tractable for biophysical techniques. Site-directed mutagenesis is the cornerstone of modern molecular biology allowing exquisite control of protein sequence. This technique is essential in functional study, genetic engineering, biochemistry and protein engineering. A number of strategies have been developed [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] with the QuikChangeTM Site-Directed Mutagenesis System developed by Stratagene (La Jolla, CA) probably the most favored.
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