System for in vitro transposition

Organic compounds -- part of the class 532-570 series – Organic compounds – Carbohydrates or derivatives

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

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06437109

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to the field of transposable nucleic acid and, more particularly to production and use of a modified transposase enzyme in a system for introducing genetic changes to nucleic acid.
Transposable genetic elements are DNA sequences, found in a wide variety of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, that can move or transpose from one position to another position in a genome. In vivo, intra-chromosomal transpositions as well as transpositions between chromosomal and non-chromosomal genetic material are known. In several systems, transposition is known to be under the control of a transposase enzyme that is typically encoded by the transposable element. The genetic structures and transposition mechanisms of various transposable elements are summarized, for example, in “Transposable Genetic Elements” in “The Encyclopedia of Molecular Biology,” Kendrew and Lawrence, Eds., Blackwell Science, Ltd., Oxford (1994), incorporated herein by reference.
In vitro transposition systems that utilize the particular transposable elements of bacteriophage Mu and bacterial transposon Tn10 have been described, by the research groups of Kiyoshi Mizuuchi and Nancy Kleckner, respectively.
The bacteriophage Mu system was first described by Mizuuchi, K., “In Vitro Transposition of Bacteria Phage Mu: A Biochemical Approach to a Novel Replication Reaction,”
Cell
:785-794 (1983) and Craigie, R. et al., “A Defined System for the DNA Strand-Transfer Reaction at the Initiation of Bacteriophage Mu Transposition: Protein and DNA Substrate Requirements,”
P.N.A.S. U.S.A
. 82:7570-7574 (1985). The DNA donor substrate (mini-Mu) for Mu in vitro reaction normally requires six Mu transposase binding sites (three of about 30 bp at each end) and an enhancer sequence located about 1 kb from the left end. The donor plasmid must be supercoiled. Proteins required are Mu-encoded A and B proteins and host-encoded HU and IHF proteins. Lavoie, B.D, and G. Chaconas, “Transposition of phage Mu DNA,”
Curr. Topics Microbiol. Immunol
. 204:83-99 (1995). The Mu-based system is disfavored for in vitro transposition system applications because the Mu termini are complex and sophisticated and because transposition requires additional proteins above and beyond the transposase.
The Tn10 system was described by Morisato, D. and N. Kleckner, “Tn10 Transposition and Circle Formation in vitro,”
Cell
51:101-111 (1987) and by Benjamin, H. W. and N. Kleckner, “Excision Of Tn10 from the Donor Site During Transposition Occurs By Flush Double-Strand Cleavages at the Transposon Termini,”
P.N.A.S. U.S.A
. 89:4648-4652 (1992). The Tn10 system involves the a supercoiled circular DNA molecule carrying the transposable element (or a linear DNA molecule plus
E. coli
IHF protein). The transposable element is defined by complex 42 bp terminal sequences with IHF binding site adjacent to the inverted repeat. In fact, even longer (81 bp) ends of Tn10 were used in reported experiments. Sakai, J. et al., “Identification and Characterization of Pre-Cleavage Synaptic Complex that is an Early Intermediate in Tn10 transposition,”
E.M.B.O. J
. 14:4374-4383 (1995). In the Tn10 system, chemical treatment of the transposase protein is essential to support active transposition. In addition, the termini of the Tn10 element limit its utility in a generalized in vitro transposition system.
Both the Mu-and Tn10-based in vitro transposition systems are further limited in that they are active only on covalently closed circular, supercoiled DNA targets. What is desired is a more broadly applicable in. vitro transposition system that utilizes shorter, more well defined termini and which is active on target DNA of any structure (linear, relaxed circular, and supercoiled circular DNA).
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is summarized in that an in vitro transposition system comprises a preparation of a suitably modified transposase of bacterial transposon Tn5, a donor DNA molecule that includes a transposable element, a target DNA molecule into which the transposable element can transpose, all provided in a suitable reaction buffer.
The transposable element of the donor DNA molecule is characterized as a transposable DNA sequence of interest, the DNA sequence of interest being flanked at its 5′- and 3′-ends by short repeat sequences that are acted upon in trans by Tn5 transposase.
The invention is further summarized in that the suitably modified transposase enzyme comprises two classes of differences from wild type Tn5 transposase, where each class has a separate measurable effect upon the overall transposition activity of the enzyme and where a greater effect is observed when both modifications are present. The suitably modified enzyme both (1) binds to the repeat sequences of the donor DNA with greater avidity than wild type Tn5 transposase (“class (1) mutation”) and (2) is less likely than the wild type protein to assume an inactive multimeric form (“class (2) mutation”). A suitably modified Tn5 transposase of the present invention that contains both class (1) and class (2) modifications induces at least about 100-fold (±10%) more transposition than the wild type enzyme, when tested in combination in an in vivo conjugation assay as described by Weinreich, M. D., “Evidence that the cis Preference of the Tn5 Transposase is Caused by Nonproductive Multimerization,”
Genes and Development
8:2363-2374 (1994), incorporated herein by reference. Under optimal conditions, transposition using the modified transposase may be higher. A modified transposase containing only a class (1) mutation binds to the repeat sequences with sufficiently greater avidity than the wild type Tn5 transposase that such a Tn5 transposase induces about 5- to 50-fold more transposition than the wild type enzyme, when measured in vivo. A modified transposase containing only a class (2) mutation is sufficiently less likely than the wild type Tn5 transposase to assume the multimeric form that such a Tn5 transposase also induces about 5- to 50-fold more transposition than the wild type enzyme, when measured in vivo.
In another aspect, the invention is summarized in that a method for transposing the transposable element from the donor DNA into the target DNA in vitro includes the steps of mixing together the suitably modified Tn5 transposase protein, the donor DNA, and the target DNA in a suitable reaction buffer, allowing the enzyme to bind to the flanking repeat sequences of the donor DNA at a temperature greater than 0° C., but no higher than about 28° C., and then raising the temperature to physiological temperature (about 37° C.) whereupon cleavage and strand transfer can occur.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a useful in vitro transposition system having few structural requirements and high efficiency.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method that can be broadly applied in various ways, such as to create absolute defective mutants, to provide selective markers to target DNA, to provide portable regions of homology to a target DNA, to facilitate insertion of specialized DNA sequences into target DNA, to provide primer binding sites or tags for DNA sequencing, to facilitate production of genetic fusions for gene expression studies and protein domain mapping, as well as to bring together other desired combinations of DNA sequences (combinatorial genetics).
It is a feature of the present invention that the modified transposase enzyme binds more tightly to DNA than does wild type Tn5 transposase.
It is an advantage of the present invention that the modified transposase facilitates in vitro transposition reaction rates of at least about 100-fold higher than can be achieved using wild type transposase (as measured in vivo). It is noted that the wild-type Tn5 transposase shows no detectable in vitro activity in the system of the present invention. Thus, while it is difficult to calculate an upper limit to the increase in activity, it is clear that hundreds, if not

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