Faculty Publications

Recombinant nucleases CEL I from celery and SP I from spinach for mutation detection

Pimkin M, Caretti E, Canutescu A, Yeung JB, Cohn H, Chen Y, Oleykowski C, Bellacosa A, Yeung AT

Recombinant nucleases CEL I from celery and SP I from spinach for mutation detection

BMC Biotechnol. 2007;7:29.

Abstract BACKGROUND: The detection of unknown mutations is important in research and medicine. For this purpose, a mismatch-specific endonuclease CEL I from celery has been established as a useful tool in high throughput projects. Previously, CEL I-like activities were described only in a variety of plants and could not be expressed in an active form in bacteria. RESULTS: We describe expression of active recombinant plant mismatch endonucleases and modification of their activities. We also report the cloning of a CEL I ortholog from Spinacia oleracea (spinach) which we termed SP I nuclease. Active CEL I and SP I nucleases were expressed as C-terminal hexahistidine fusions and affinity purified from the cell culture media. Both recombinant enzymes were active in mutation detection in BRCA1 gene of patient-derived DNA. Native SP nuclease purified from spinach is unable to incise at single-nucleotide substitutions and loops containing a guanine nucleotide, but the recombinant SP I nuclease can cut at these sites. CONCLUSION: The insect cell-expressed CEL I orthologs may not be identical to their native counterparts purified from plant tissues. The present expression system should facilitate further development of CEL I-based mutation detection technologies.

Last updated on Saturday, March 13, 2010