4.8 Article

Scalable gene synthesis by selective amplification of DNA pools from high-fidelity microchips

Journal

NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 12, Pages 1295-U108

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nbt.1716

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Funding

  1. NHGRI NIH HHS [P50 HG005550, P50 HG003170, P50 HG005550-01] Funding Source: Medline

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Development of cheap, high-throughput and reliable gene synthesis methods will broadly stimulate progress in biology and biotechnology(1). Currently, the reliance on column-synthesized oligonucleotides as a source of DNA limits further cost reductions in gene synthesis(2). Oligonucleotides from DNA microchips can reduce costs by at least an order of magnitude(3-5), yet efforts to scale their use have been largely unsuccessful owing to the high error rates and complexity of the oligonucleotide mixtures. Here we use high-fidelity DNA microchips, selective oligonucleotide pool amplification, optimized gene assembly protocols and enzymatic error correction to develop a method for highly parallel gene synthesis. We tested our approach by assembling 47 genes, including 42 challenging therapeutic antibody sequences, encoding a total of similar to 35 kilobase pairs of DNA. These assemblies were performed from a complex background containing 13,000 oligonucleotides encoding similar to 2.5 megabases of DNA, which is at least 50 times larger than in previously published attempts.

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