Claims
- 1. A positive genetic selection system employing a precursor comprising a native intein in its natural or homologous modifiable extein context for the screening of agents which inhibit or activate protein splicing, said selection system comprising: (1) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding a non-selectable form of a target enzyme, and (2) a second gene encoding a selectable form of said target enzyme which is dominantly cytotoxic upon interaction under predetermined selection conditions, said second gene containing an intein, wherein the inhibition or activation of said selectable form of said target enzyme by a given agent affects the viability of said host cell.
- 2. The positive genetic selection system of claim 1, wherein the activation of said selectable form of said target enzyme by a given agent results in the death of the host cell.
- 3. The positive genetic selection system of claim 1, wherein the inhibition of said selectable form of said target enzyme by a given agent results in the viability of the host cell.
- 4. The positive genetic selection system of claim 1, wherein said host cell contains a first gene encoding a drug-resistant form of the target enzyme and a second gene encoding a drug-sensitive form of the target enzyme which is dominantly cytotoxic upon interaction with said drug.
- 5. The positive genetic selection system of claim 1, wherein said first gene encodes a wild type form of said target enzyme and said second gene encodes a dominant cytotoxic form of said target enzyme.
- 6. The positive genetic selection system of claim 4, wherein in the absence of a silent mutation of said extein, said intein is selected from the group consisting of an intein inserted into the drug-sensitive form of said target enzyme and a natural intein in a mutated native or homologous extein, wherein said mutation renders the extein cytotoxic upon interaction with said drug.
- 7. The positive genetic selection system of claim 1, wherein said agent comprises an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 8. The positive genetic selection system of claim 4, wherein said intein comprises the M. xenopi GyrA intein, said homologous extein comprises E.coli GyrA and said host cell comprises E. coli.
- 9. The positive genetic selection system of claim 8, wherein said drug-resistant form of said target enzyme is the Ser83 mutant of E.coli GyrA.
- 10. The positive genetic selection system of claim 7, wherein said peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 11. The positive genetic selection system of claim 5, wherein in the absence of a silent mutation in said extein, said intein is selected from the group consisting of an intein inserted in to the cytotoxic form of said target enzyme and a natural intein in a mutated native or homologous extein, wherein said mutated native extein is cytotoxic.
- 12. The positive genetic selection system of claim 11, wherein said agent comprises an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 13. The positive genetic selection system of claim 11, wherein said natural intein is the M. tuberculosis DnaB intein and said mutated native extein is the M.tuberculosis R231C mutant, and wherein said host cell is E. coli.
- 14. The positive genetic selection system of claim 13, wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 15. A method of screening for agents which inhibit protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) creating a positive selection system comprising a host cell containing a gene encoding a dominantly cytotoxic protein containing an intein; and (b) culturing the host cell of step (a) in the presence of test agents, wherein the inhibition of splicing of said cytotoxic protein results in viability of said host cell.
- 16. The method of claim 15, wherein said agent is expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and said agent is identified by the gene encoding said agent from said surviving host.
- 17. The method of claim 15, wherein said positive selection system of step (a) comprises the positive genetic selection wherein said host cell contains a first gene encoding a drug-resistant form of the target enzyme and a second gene encoding a drug-sensitive form of the target enzyme which is dominantly cytotoxic upon interaction with said drug, and wherein step (b) further comprises culturing said host cell of step (a) in the presence of said drug.
- 18. The method of claim 15, wherein said positive selection system of step (a) comprises a first gene encoding a wild type form of said target enzyme and a second gene encoding a dominant cytotoxic form of said target enzyme.
- 19. The method of claims 17 or 18, wherein said host cell of step (a) expresses an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof, and wherein said test agents of step (b) comprise said in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 20. The method of claim 19 wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 21. A method for screening of agents which activate protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) creating a positive selection system comprising a host cell containing a gene encoding a dominantly cytotoxic protein, said gene containing an inactive intein; and (b) culturing said host cell of step (a) in the presence of individual test agents, wherein the activation of splicing of said cytotoxic protein results in host cell death.
- 22. The method of claim 21, wherein said agent is controllably expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and said agent is identified by the identification of the gene encoding said agent in a parallel sample of said host cell in which expression of said agent was not activated.
- 23. The method of claim 21, wherein said positive selection system of step (a) comprises the positive genetic selection system wherein said host cell contains a first gene encoding a drug-resistant form of the target enzyme and a second gene encoding a drug-sensitive form of the target enzyme which is dominantly cytotoxic upon interaction with said drug, and wherein step (b) further comprises culturing said positive selection system of step (a) in the presence of said drug.
- 24. The method of claim 21, wherein said positive selection system of step (a) comprises the positive genetic selection system wherein the drug-resistant form of said target enzyme is the Ser83 mutant of E.coli GyrA.
- 25. The method of claims 21 or 22, wherein said host cell of step (a) expresses an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof, and wherein said test agents of step (b) comprise said in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 26. The method of claim 25, wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 27. A positive genetic selection system for the screening of agents which inhibit protein splicing, said selection system comprising: (1) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding a controllable form of a target enzyme which is required for cell viability, and (2) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an intein, wherein the inhibition of splicing of said target enzyme by a given agent results in the reduced viability or death of said host cell under conditions which do not permit the expression of said controllable first gene of said target enzyme.
- 28. The selection system of claim 27, wherein said controllable form of said target protein is selected from the group consisting of a drug-sensitive target protein, an inducer-sensitive target protein, a temperature-sensitive target protein, and a target protein operably linked to a controllable promoter.
- 29. The selection system of claim 27, wherein said intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign intein inserted into the homologous extein of said target enzyme and a natural intein in a native extein.
- 30. A positive genetic selection system for the screening of agents which activate protein splicing, said selection system comprising: (1) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding a controllable form of a target enzyme required for cell viability, and (2) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an inactive intein, wherein the activation of splicing of said target enzyme by a given agent results in the survival of said host cell under conditions which do not permit the expression of said controllable first gene of said target enzyme.
- 31. The selection system of claim 30, wherein said controllable target protein is selected from the group consisting of a drug-sensitive target protein, an inducer-sensitive target protein, a temperature-sensitive target protein, and a target protein operably linked to a controllable promoter.
- 32. The selection system of claim 30, wherein said inactive intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign inactive intein inserted into the homologous extein of said target enzyme and a natural inactive intein in a native extein.
- 33. The method of claims 27 or 30, wherein said host cell of step (a) expresses an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof, and wherein said test agents of step (b) comprise said in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 34. The method of claim 33, wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 35. A method of screening for agents which inhibit protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the positive selection system of claim 27 in the presence of test agents under non-permissive conditions; and (b) identifying non-surviving host cells from step (a), wherein said agent inhibits protein splicing.
- 36. The method of claim 35, wherein said agent is expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and wherein said non-surviving host cells of step (b) contain test agents which inhibit protein splicing.
- 37. A method of screening for agents which activate protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the positive selection system of claim 30 in the presence of test agents under non-permissive conditions; and (b) identifying surviving host cells from step (a), wherein said agent activates protein splicing.
- 38. The method of claim 37, wherein said agent is expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and wherein said surviving host cells of step (b) contain test agents which activate protein splicing.
- 39. The method of claims 36 or 38, wherein said host cell of step (a) expresses an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof, and wherein said test agents of step (a) comprise said in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 40. The method of claim 39, wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 41. A reporter system for the screening of agents which inhibit protein splicing, said reporter system comprising a host cell which contains a reporter gene encoding a non-essential protein, said reporter gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign intein inserted into the homologous or non-homologous extein of said reporter gene in the absence of a silent mutation of said extein and a natural intein in a native reporter extein, and wherein the inhibition of splicing of said non-essential protein by a given agent results in a specific detectable phenotype of said host cell.
- 42. A reporter system for the screening of agents which activate protein splicing, said reporter system comprising a host cell which contains a reporter gene encoding a non-essential protein, said reporter gene containing an inactive intein, wherein said inactive intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign inactive intein inserted into the homologous or non-homologous extein of said reporter gene in the absence of a silent mutation of said extein and a natural inactive intein in a native reporter extein, and wherein the activation of splicing of said non-essential protein by a given agent results in a specific selectable phenotype of said host cell.
- 43. The method of screening for agents which inhibit protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the reporter system of claim 41 in the presence of test agents; and (b) identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype are in the presence of test agents which inhibit protein splicing.
- 44. The method of claim 43 wherein said agent is expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and wherein step (b) comprises identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype contain test agents which inhibit protein splicing.
- 45. A method of screening for agents which activate protein splicing, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the reporter system of claim 42 in the presence of test agents; and (b) identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype are in the presence of test agents which activate protein splicing.
- 46. The method of claim 45 wherein said agent is expressed within the host cell as a protein or portion thereof and wherein step (b) comprises identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype contain test agents which activate protein splicing.
- 47. The method of claims 44 or 46, wherein said host cell of step (a) expresses an in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof, and wherein said test agents of step (a) comprise said in vivo peptide library or derivatives thereof.
- 48. The method of claim 47, wherein said in vivo peptide library comprises a combinatorial peptide library in a fragment of chicken α-spectrin.
- 49. A method of controlling gene expression in vivo, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) replacing a homologous extein gene in a host cell with a gene containing an intein; and (b) modulating the splicing of the intein-containing gene of step (a) with agents which inhibit or activate said splicing.
- 50. The method of claim 49, wherein said replacement of step (a) comprises inserting said intein gene into said homologous extein gene by homologous recombination.
- 51. The method of claim 49, wherein said replacement of step (a) comprises inactivating said homologous extein gene and said intein-containing gene is introduced as a second gene in the cell.
- 52. A method of controlling the delivery of a drug that is at least partially proteinaceous in vivo, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) inserting an intein into the protein portion of said drug to create an inactive drug; (b) administering said inactive drug of step (a); and (c) activating protein splicing of said inactive drug to produce an active drug.
- 53. The method of claim 52, wherein step (b) further comprises utilizing gene therapy to target said inactive drug to a desired tissue.
- 54. The method of claim 52, wherein said intein of step (a) comprises a temperature-sensitive intein, and wherein said activation of step (c) comprises exposing a desired target tissue to any treatment which increases or decreases temperature of said target tissue thus inducing splicing of said temperature-sensitive intein.
- 55. The method of claim 52, wherein said activation of step (c) comprises injecting a desired target tissue with an agent which activates splicing.
- 56. The method of claim 52, wherein step (a) further comprises utilizing gene therapy to target an agent which activates splicing to a desired tissue, and wherein said administration of step (b) comprises systemic administration.
- 57. The method of claim 52, wherein said administration of step (b) comprises systemic transformation with a non-cell specific vector containing said inactive drug of step (a) operably linked to a desired tissue-specific promoter, and wherein said inactive drug is expressed only in cells which can activate said tissue-specific promoter.
- 58. A method for generating temperature sensitive mutants of the Mxe GyrA intein in E.coli GyrA, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) identification of the region containing the Mxe GyrA intein beta-strand B8 and the loop between Beta-strands B8 and B9 in E.coli GyrA; (b) mutating said region; and (c) introducing the mutated intein gene into a cell and examining the ability to splice under permissive and non-permissive temperatures.
- 59. A method for generating temperature sensitive mutants of an intein, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) identification of a region homologous to the Mxe GyrA intein beta-strand B8 and the loop between beta-strands B8 and B9 in an intein; (b) mutating said homologous region of said second intein; and (c) introducing the mutated intein gene into a cell and examining the ability to splice under permissive and non-permissive temperatures.
- 60. A method of screening for temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of
(a) creating a positive selection system comprising a host cell containing a gene encoding a dominantly cytotoxic protein, said gene containing an intein, and wherein said intein is mutagenized; and (b) culturing the host cell of step (a) at a range of temperatures, wherein at a predetermined temperature, the protein fails to splice and results in viability of said host cell.
- 61. A method of screening for temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of
(a) creating a positive selection system comprising a host cell containing a gene encoding a dominantly cytotoxic protein, said gene containing an inactive intein, and wherein said intein is mutagenized; and (b) culturing the host cell of step (a) at a range of temperatures, wherein at a predetermined temperature, the intein splices and results in the death of the host cell.
- 62. A positive selection system for the screening of temperatures which inhibit protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said selection system comprising (1) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding a controllable form of a target enzyme which is required for cell viability, and (2) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is mutagenized, and wherein the inhibition of splicing of said target enzyme by a given non-permissive temperature results in the reduced viability or death of said host cell under conditions which do not permit the expression of said controllable first gene of said target enzyme.
- 63. A positive selection system for the screening of temperatures which activate protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said selection system comprising (1) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding a controllable form of a target enzyme which is required for cell viability, and (2) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is mutagenized, and wherein the activation of splicing of said target enzyme by a given permissive temperature results in the viability of said host cell under conditions which do not permit the expression of said controllable first gene of said target enzyme.
- 64. A method of screening for temperatures which inhibit protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the positive selection system of claim 62 in the presence of non-permissive temperatures; and (b) identifying non-surviving host cells from step (a), wherein said temperature inhibits protein splicing.
- 65. A method of screening for temperatures which activate protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the positive selection system of claim 63 in the presence of permissive temperatures; and (b) identifying surviving host cells from step (a), wherein said temperature activates protein splicing.
- 66. A reporter system for the screening of temperatures which inhibit protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said reporter system comprising a host cell which contains a reporter gene encoding a non-essential protein, said reporter gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign intein inserted into the homologous or non-homologous extein of said reporter gene in the absence of a silent mutation of said extein and a natural intein in a native reporter extein, and wherein said intein is mutagenized, and wherein the inhibition of splicing of said non-essential protein by a non-permissive temperature results in a specific detectable phenotype.
- 67. A reporter system for the screening of temperatures which activate protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said reporter system comprising a host cell which contains a reporter gene encoding a non-essential protein, said reporter gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is selected from the group consisting of a foreign intein inserted into the homologous or non-homologous extein of said reporter gene in the absence of a silent mutation of said extein and a natural intein in a native reporter extein, and wherein said intein is mutagenized, and wherein the activation of splicing of said non-essential protein by a permissive temperature results in a specific detectable phenotype.
- 68. A method for screening for temperatures which inhibit protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the reporter system of claim 66 in the presence of a range of temperatures; and (b) identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype are in the presence non-permissive temperatures which inhibit protein splicing.
- 69. A method for screening for temperatures which activate protein splicing in temperature-sensitive inteins, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) culturing the reporter system of claim 67 in the presence of a range of temperatures; and (b) identifying host cells from step (a) having a specific detectable phenotype, wherein said host cells with detectable phenotype are in the presence permissive temperatures which activate protein splicing.
- 70. The positive genetic selection system of claim 6, 11, 29 or 32, wherein the extein is a heterologous extein and the intein is inserted into the extein at a site which is substantially identical to the homologous extein from about one to about five amino acid residues at either or both ends of the intein.
- 71. The reporter system of claim 41, wherein the extein is a heterologous extein and the intein is inserted into the extein at a site which is substantially identical to the homologous extein from about one to five amino acid residues at either or both ends of the intein.
- 72. The positive selection system of claim 6, 11, 29 or 32, wherein the extein is a heterologous extein and one to five amino acid residues of the native extein are present at one or both ends of the intein and said one to five amino acid residues are inserted into the heterologous extein along with the intein.
- 73. The reporter system of claim 41, wherein the extein is a heterologous extein and one to five amino acid residues of the native extein are present at one or both ends of the intein and said one to five amino acid residues are inserted into the heterologous extein along with the intein.
- 74. The positive genetic selection system of claims 6, 11, 29 or 32, wherein the insertion site is selected from the group consisting essentially of a surface location on the extein, a loop region of the extein, a protease sensitive site within the extein, or at a position known to permit insertion of one or more amino acid residues in the extein without inactivating the extein.
- 75. The positive genetic selection system of claim 70, wherein the insertion site is selected from the group consisting essentially of a surface location on the extein, a loop region of the extein, a protease sensitive site within the extein, or at a position known to permit insertion of one or more amino acid residues in the extein without inactivating the extein.
- 76. The positive genetic selection system of claim 72, wherein the insertion site is selected from the group consisting essentially of a surface location on the extein, a loop region of the extein, a protease sensitive site within the extein, or at a position known to permit insertion of one or more amino acid residues in the extein without inactivating the extein.
- 77. The reporter system of claim 41 or 71, wherein the insertion site is selected from the group consisting essentially of a surface location on the extein, a loop region of the extein, a protease sensitive site within the extein, or at a position known to permit insertion of one or more amino acid residues in the extein without inactivating the extein.
- 78. A positive genetic selection system for screening of agents which inhibit protein splicing, said selection system comprising:
i) a host which contains a first gene encoding an inactivated form of a target enzyme which is required for cell viability under predetermined conditions; and ii) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an intein, wherein the inhibition of splicing of said target enzyme by a given agent results in the reduced viability of said host cell under said predetermined conditions wherein expression of said target enzyme is required for viability or growth.
- 79. A positive selection system for the screening of temperatures which inhibit protein splicing in temperature sensitive inteins, said selection system comprising:
i) a host cell which contains a first gene encoding an inactivated form of the target enzyme which is required for cell viability under predetermined conditions; and ii) a second gene encoding an expressed form of said target enzyme, said second gene containing an intein, wherein said intein is mutagenized and wherein the inhibition of splicing of said target enzyme at one or more predetermined temperatures results in the reduced viability of said host cell under said predetermined conditions wherein expression of said target enzyme is required for viability or growth.
- 80. A method of identifying an agent for antimicrobial activity against a microbial pathogen that naturally has an intein in an essential gene comprising screening for agents that block splicing of that intein in its native context or a homologous extein context.
- 81. A method of identifying an agent for antimicrobial activity against a microbial pathogen that naturally has an intein in an essential gene comprising screening for agents that block splicing of that intein in a heterologous extein context that includes one or more native extein residues flanking one or both ends of the intein.
- 82. A method of identifying agents with antimicrobial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis comprising screening for agents that inhibit splicing of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis DnaB intein.
- 83. A method of identifying agents with antimicrobial activity against Mycobacterium leprae comprising screening for agents that inhibit splicing of the Mycobacterium xenopi or Mycobacterium leprae GyrA inteins.
- 84. A method of identifying lead compounds with antimicrobial activity comprising identifying agents that inhibit splicing of an intein which is naturally present in that organism.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This Application is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Pat. No. 5,834,247, issued Nov. 10, 1998, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09430221 |
Oct 1999 |
US |
Child |
10324023 |
Dec 2002 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08811492 |
Mar 1997 |
US |
Child |
09430221 |
Oct 1999 |
US |