An in vivo selection system for homing endonuclease activity

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Abstract

Homing endonucleases are enzymes that catalyze the highly sequence-specific cleavage of DNA. We have developed an in vivo selection in Escherichia coli that links cell survival with homing endonuclease-mediated DNA cleavage activity and sequence specificity. Using this selection, wild-type and mutant variants of three homing endonucleases were characterized without requiring protein purification and in vitro analysis. This selection system may facilitate the study of sequence-specific DNA cleaving enzymes, and selections based on this work may enable the evolution of homing endonucleases with novel activities or specificities.

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Gruen, M., Chang, K., Serbanescu, I., & Liu, D. R. (2002). An in vivo selection system for homing endonuclease activity. Nucleic Acids Research, 30(7), e29. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/30.7.e29

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