Abstract
Robust high-throughput synthesis methods are needed to expand the repertoire of repetitive protein-polymers for different applications. To address this need, we developed a new method, overlap extension rolling circle amplification (OERCA), for the highly parallel synthesis of genes encoding repetitive protein-polymers. OERCA involves a single PCR-type reaction for the rolling circle amplification of a circular DNA template and simultaneous overlap extension by thermal cycling. We characterized the variables that control OERCA and demonstrated its superiority over existing methods, its robustness, high-throughput and versatility by synthesizing variants of elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) and protease-responsive polymers of glucagon-like peptide-1 analogues. Despite the GC-rich, highly repetitive sequences of ELPs, we synthesized remarkably large genes without recursive ligation. OERCA also enabled us to discover ‘smart’ biopolymers that exhibit fully reversible thermally responsive behaviour. This powerful strategy generates libraries of repetitive genes over a wide and tunable range of molecular weights in a ‘one-pot’ parallel format.
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Acknowledgements
A.C. acknowledges the financial support of NIH grants R21 EB009904 and R01 GM61232, M.A. acknowledges the support of a graduate fellowship from the Center for Biologically Inspired Materials and Material Systems, and F.G.Q. acknowledges the support of a fellowship from the Medtronic Foundation.
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A.C. designed experiments, analysed data and prepared the manuscript. M.A. and F.G.Q. designed and performed experiments, analysed data and prepared the manuscript. D.J.C. designed experiments.
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Amiram, M., Quiroz, F., Callahan, D. et al. A highly parallel method for synthesizing DNA repeats enables the discovery of ‘smart’ protein polymers. Nature Mater 10, 141–148 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2942
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat2942
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