4.7 Article

Reducing Codon Redundancy and Screening Effort of Combinatorial Protein Libraries Created by Saturation Mutagenesis

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 83-92

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/sb300037w

Keywords

codon redundancy; primer degeneracy; screening effort; library quality; directed evolution; combinatorial mutagenesis

Funding

  1. Max-Planck-Society
  2. Arthur C. Cope Foundation

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Saturation mutagenesis probes define sections of the vast protein sequence space. However, even if randomization is limited this way, the combinatorial numbers problem is severe. Because diversity is created at the codon level, codon redundancy is a crucial factor determining the necessary effort for library screening. Additionally, due to the probabilistic nature of the sampling process, oversampling is required to ensure library completeness as well as a high probability to encounter all unique variants. Our trick employs a special mixture of three primers, creating a degeneracy of 22 unique codons coding for the 20 canonical amino acids. Therefore, codon redundancy and subsequent screening effort is significantly reduced, and a balanced distribution of codon per amino acid is achieved, as demonstrated exemplarily for a library of cyclohexanone monooxygenase. We show that this strategy is suitable for any saturation mutagenesis methodology to generate less-redundant libraries.

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