Difference between revisions of "Plasmid backbones/Assembly of protein fusions"

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Protein engineers often need to do in-frame assemblies in order to assemble together different signal sequences, proteins domains, and protein tags.  BioBrick&trade; standard assembly is not well-designed for this task because the scar sequence formed by the SpeI-XbaI ligation is 8 base pairs long.  As a result, different groups have developed modified or alternative assembly schemes to facilitate assembly of protein domains.  
 
Protein engineers often need to do in-frame assemblies in order to assemble together different signal sequences, proteins domains, and protein tags.  BioBrick&trade; standard assembly is not well-designed for this task because the scar sequence formed by the SpeI-XbaI ligation is 8 base pairs long.  As a result, different groups have developed modified or alternative assembly schemes to facilitate assembly of protein domains.  

Revision as of 19:26, 2 September 2008

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Plasmid backbones/Assembly of protein fusions
Part assembly System operation Protein expression Assembly of protein fusions Part measurement Screening of part libraries Building BioBrick vectors DNA synthesis Other standards Archive
Or get some help on plasmid backbones.

Protein engineers often need to do in-frame assemblies in order to assemble together different signal sequences, proteins domains, and protein tags. BioBrick™ standard assembly is not well-designed for this task because the scar sequence formed by the SpeI-XbaI ligation is 8 base pairs long. As a result, different groups have developed modified or alternative assembly schemes to facilitate assembly of protein domains.

Pam Silver's lab has developed the Silver lab standard for assembling protein domains. It relies on shortening the BioBrick prefix and suffix each by 1 base pair such that the resulting SpeI-XbaI scar is only 6 base pairs long and protein domains can be assembled in frame.

References

A New Biobrick Assembly Strategy Designed for Facile Protein Engineering
MIT SBWG Technical Reports, 2006 Apr 20
Ira Philips, Pam Silver
[http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/32535 URL] (open access!)