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Protecting Linear DNA Templates in Cell-Free Expression Systems from Diverse Bacteria.

Sung Sun YimNathan I JohnsVincent NoireauxHarris H Wang
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2020)
Recent advances in cell-free systems have opened up new capabilities in synthetic biology from rapid prototyping of genetic circuits and metabolic pathways to portable diagnostics and biomanufacturing. A current bottleneck in cell-free systems, especially those employing non-E. coli bacterial species, is the required use of plasmid DNA, which can be laborious to construct, clone, and verify. Linear DNA templates offer a faster and more direct route for many cell-free applications, but they are often rapidly degraded in cell-free reactions. In this study, we evaluated GamS from λ-phage, DNA fragments containing Chi-sites, and Ku from Mycobacterium tuberculosis for their ability to protect linear DNA templates in diverse bacterial cell-free systems. We show that these nuclease inhibitors exhibit differential protective activities against endogenous exonucleases in five different cell-free lysates, highlighting their utility for diverse bacterial species. We expect these linear DNA protection strategies will accelerate high-throughput approaches in cell-free synthetic biology.
Keyphrases
  • cell free
  • circulating tumor
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • high throughput
  • escherichia coli
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • crispr cas
  • long non coding rna
  • transcription factor
  • single molecule