Site-directed mutagenesis

(in vitro mutagenesis)

Site-directed mutagenesis is a molecular biology technique in which a mutation is created at a defined site in a DNA molecule, usually a circular molecule known as a plasmid. In general, site-directed mutagenesis requires that the wild-type gene sequence be known.

Invention

An important milestone in modern molecular biology came in 1978 with the first description of site-directed mutagenesis using oligonucleotides for in vitro synthesis of mutant DNA. So central has this technique become to all of biochemistry and molecular biology that Michael Smith, its pioneer, shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in October 1993 with Kary B. Mullis who developed PCR.

In 1987 Kunkel et al. introduced an improvement to the technique that eliminated the need for phenotypic selection. The plasmid to be mutated would be transformed into an E. coli deficient in two genes, dUTPase & uracil deglycosidase. The former would prevent the breakdown of dUTP, a nucleotide that replaces dTTP in RNA, resulting in an abundance of the molecule, and deficiency in the latter would prevent the removal of dUTP from newly synthesized DNA. As the double-mutant E. coli replicates the up-taken plasmid, its enzymatic machinery incorporates the dUTP, resulting in a distinguishable copy. This copy is then extracted and incubated with an oligonucleotide containing the desired mutation, which attaches by base pair hydrogen bonding to the complementary wild-type gene sequence, as well as the Klenow enzyme, dNTPs, and DNA ligase. The reaction essentially replicates the dUTP-containing plasmid using as template the oligonucleotide, giving a nearly identical copy. The essential differences being that the copy contains dTTP rather than dUTP, as well as the desired mutation. When the chimeric double-stranded plasmid, containing the dUTP, unmutated strand and the dTTP, mutated strand, is inserted into a normal, wild-type E. coli, the dUTP-containing strand is broken down, whereas the mutation-containing strand is replicated.

Through PCR

Usually focused on plasmid templates, the PCR method involves the use of oligonucleotide "primers" containing the desired mutation. The theory is woven into the PCR method: As the primers are the ends of newly-synthesized strands, should there be a mis-match during the first cycle in binding the template DNA strand, after that first round, the primer-based strand (containing the mutation) would be at equal concentration to the original template. After successive cycles, it would exponentially grow, and after 25, would outnumber the original, unmutated strand in the region of 8 million : 1, resulting in a nearly homogenous solution of mutated amplified fragments.

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