Abstract
Selection has been invaluable for genetic manipulation, although counter-selection has historically exhibited limited robustness and convenience. TolC, an outer membrane pore involved in transmembrane transport in E coli, has been implemented as a selectable/counter-selectable marker, but counter-selection escape frequency using colicin E1 precludes using tolC for inefficient genetic manipulations and/or with large libraries. Here, we leveraged unbiased deep sequencing of 96 independent lineages exhibiting counter-selection escape to identify loss-of-function mutations, which offered mechanistic insight and guided strain engineering to reduce counter-selection escape frequency by ∼40-fold. We fundamentally improved the tolC counter-selection by supplementing a second agent, vancomycin, which reduces counter-selection escape by 425-fold, compared colicin E1 alone. Combining these improvements in a mismatch repair proficient strain reduced counter-selection escape frequency by 1.3E6-fold in total, making tolC counter-selection as effective as most selectable markers, and adding a valuable tool to the genome editing toolbox these improvements permitted us to perform stable and continuous rounds of selection/counter-selection using tolC, enabling replacement of 10 alleles without requiring genotypic screening for the first time. Finally, we combined these advances to create an optimized E coli strain for genome engineering that is ∼10-fold more efficient at achieving allelic diversity than previous best practices. © 2014 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press.
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CITATION STYLE
Gregg, C. J., Lajoie, M. J., Napolitano, M. G., Mosberg, J. A., Goodman, D. B., Aach, J., … Church, G. M. (2014). Rational optimization of tolC as a powerful dual selectable marker for genome engineering. Nucleic Acids Research, 42(7), 4779–4790. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt1374
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