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Evolving a Thermostable Terminal Deoxynucleotidyl Transferase.

Jasmine Puay Suan ChuaMaybelle Kho GoTrina OsothpraropSeth McdonaldAlexander G KarabadzhakWen Shan YewSergio PeisajovichSaurabh Nirantar
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2020)
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) catalyzes template free incorporation of arbitrary nucleotides onto single-stranded DNA. Due to this unique feature, TdT is widely used in biotechnology and clinical applications. One particularly tantalizing use is the synthesis of long de novo DNA molecules by TdT-mediated iterative incorporation of a 3' reversibly blocked nucleotide, followed by deblocking. However, wild-type (WT) TdT is not optimized for the incorporation of 3' modified nucleotides, and TdT engineering is hampered by the fact that TdT is marginally stable and only present in mesophilic organisms. We sought to first evolve a thermostable TdT variant to serve as backbone for subsequent evolution to enable efficient incorporation of 3'-modified nucleotides. A thermostable variant would be a good starting point for such an effort, as evolution to incorporate bulky modified nucleotides generally results in lowered stability. In addition, a thermostable TdT would also be useful when blunt dsDNA is a substrate as higher temperature could be used to melt dsDNA. Here, we developed an assay to identify thermostable TdT variants. After screening about 10 000 TdT mutants, we identified a variant, named TdT3-2, that is 10 °C more thermostable than WT TdT, while preserving the catalytic properties of the WT enzyme.
Keyphrases
  • cell free
  • computed tomography
  • gene expression
  • mass spectrometry
  • multidrug resistant
  • deep learning
  • single cell