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. 1988 Feb 11;16(3):791–802. doi: 10.1093/nar/16.3.791

5'-3' exonucleases in phosphorothioate-based oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis.

J R Sayers 1, W Schmidt 1, F Eckstein 1
PMCID: PMC334719  PMID: 2830593

Abstract

The application of T7 and lambda exonuclease to phosphorothioate-based oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was investigated. Oligonucleotide primers designed to introduce single or double base mismatches, an insertion or a deletion (each of 16 bases) were annealed to M13 phage derivatives. Double stranded closed circular DNA (RF IV) containing phosphorothioate internucleotidic linkages in the (-)strand was prepared enzymatically from these templates. A nick was introduced into the (+)strand of the hetroduplex DNA. This nicked DNA (RF II) was subjected to treatment with T7 or lambda exonuclease. Both of these enzymes were able to degrade almost all of the viral (+)strand when presented with DNA containing one or two base mismatches. Repolymerisation of the DNA after the gapping reaction, followed by transfection into E. coli cells gave mutational efficiencies of up to 95%. In the case of RF II DNA prepared with insertion or deletion primers these exonucleases could only partially degrade the viral (+)strand but were nevertheless highly efficient in such mutagenesis experiments.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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