Claims
- 1. An in vitro method of redistributing sequence variations between non-identical polynucleotide sequences, comprising:
a) Making a heteroduplex polynucleotide from two non-identical polynucleotides, the heteroduplex having first and second strands; b) introducing a nick in the second strand at or near a base pair mismatch site; c) removing mismatched base(s) from the mismatch site where the nick occurred; and d) using the first strand as template to replace the removed base(s) with bases that complement base(s) in the first strand.
- 2. An in vitro method of redistributing sequence variations between non-identical polynucleotide sequences, comprising:
a) Making a heteroduplex polynucleotide from two non-identical polynucleotides, the heteroduplex having first and second strands; b) mixing the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence with an effective amount of mismatch-directed strand cleavage activity, proofreading activity, and ligase activity; and c) allowing sufficient time for a number of non-complementary nucleotide base pairs to be converted to complementary base pairs.
- 3. A method according to claim 1 or 2 wherein the mismatch-directed strand cleavage activity is supplied by a mismatch endonuclease, proofreading activity is supplied by a proofreading enzyme, and ligase activity is supplied by a ligase enzyme.
- 4. An in vitro method of making a population of sequence variants from a heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence, comprising:
a. mixing copies of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence with an effective amount of a mismatch endonuclease, a proofreading enzyme, and a ligase enzyme; and b. allowing sufficient time for a number of non-complementary nucleotide base pairs to be converted to complementary base pairs, wherein a population of polynucleotide sequence variants result.
- 5. A method of obtaining a polynucleotide sequence encoding a desired functional property, comprising:
a) preparing at least one heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence; b) mixing copies of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence with an effective amount of a mismatch endonuclease, a proofreading enzyme, and a ligase enzyme; c) allowing sufficient time for a number of non-complementary nucleotide base pairs to be converted to complementary base pairs, wherein a population of polynucleotide sequence variants result; and d) screening or selecting a population of variants for the desired functional property.
- 6. A method according to claim 5 further comprising:
e. denaturing the population of variants in claim 5 or a subpopulation of variants obtained by screening or selecting to obtain a population of single stranded polynucleotide variants; f. annealing said population of single stranded polynucleotide variants to form a diverse population heteroduplex polynucleotide sequences; g. mixing copies of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence with an effective amount of a mismatch endonuclease, a proofreading enzyme, and a ligase enzyme; h. allowing sufficient time for a number of non-complementary nucleotide base pairs to be converted to complementary base pairs, wherein a population of polynucleotide sequence variants result; and i. screening or selecting for a population of variants having a desired functional property.
- 7. The method of claim 5 or 6 further comprising converting DNA to RNA prior to screening.
- 8. The method of claim 1 wherein said heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is either circular or linear.
- 9. The method of claim 1 wherein said heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is a replicon.
- 10. The method of claim 4 wherein said variant polynucleotide sequences have different amounts of complementarity.
- 11. The method of claim 2 wherein said mismatch-directed strand cleavage activity, proofreading activity, or ligase activity is mixed sequentially to or concurrently with at least one of the other two activities.
- 12. The method of claim 3 wherein parental molecules of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is greater than 47% identical.
- 13. The method of claim 3 wherein parental molecules of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is greater than 54% identical.
- 14. The method of claim 3 wherein parental molecules of the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is greater than 75% identical.
- 15. The method of claim 3 wherein the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is about 1000 bp.
- 16. The method of claim 3 wherein the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is about 10,000 bp.
- 17. The method of claim 3 wherein the heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence is about 100,000 bp.
- 18. A method of identifying a reasserted DNA molecule encoding a protein with a desired functional property, comprising:
(a) providing at least one single-stranded uracil-containing DNA or RNA molecule, which single-stranded uracil-containing molecule, or a complementary strand thereto, encodes a protein; (b) providing one or a plurality of non-identical single-stranded DNA molecules capable of hybridizing to the single-stranded uracil-containing molecule, wherein said DNA molecules encode at least one additional variant of the protein; (c) contacting the single-stranded uracil-containing molecule with at least one single-stranded DNA molecule of step (b), thereby producing an annealed DNA molecule; (d) incubating the annealed DNA molecule with a mismatch endonuclease, proofreading enzyme and a ligase, thereby producing a recombined DNA strand annealed to the uracil-containing DNA molecule; (e) amplifying the reasserted DNA strand under conditions wherein the uracil-containing DNA molecule is not amplified, thereby producing a population of reasserted DNA molecules; and, (f) screening or selecting the population of reasserted DNA molecules to identify those that encode a polypeptide having the desired functional property, thereby identifying one or more DNA molecules(s) that encode a polypeptide with the desired functional property.
- 19. A kit used for increasing diversity in a population of sequences, comprising: preparing at least one heteroduplex polynucleotide; mixing said heteroduplex polynucleotide sequence with an effective amount of mismatch-directed strand cleavage activity, proofreading activity, and ligase activity; and allowing sufficient time for the percentage of complementarity to increase, wherein diversity in the population is increased.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/402,342, filed Aug. 8, 2002; and U.S. application Ser. No. 10/066,390, filed Feb. 1, 2002, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/268,785, filed Feb. 14, 2001 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/266,386, filed Feb. 2, 2001, and which are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (3)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60402342 |
Aug 2002 |
US |
|
60268785 |
Feb 2001 |
US |
|
60266386 |
Feb 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
10066390 |
Feb 2002 |
US |
Child |
10280913 |
Oct 2002 |
US |