Publication | Open Access
Synthesis of a gene for the HIV transactivator protein TAT by a novel single stranded approach involving<i>in vivo</i>gap repair
59
Citations
28
References
1988
Year
Cloning VectorViral ReplicationEngineeringHuman RetrovirusImmunologyOligonucleotideSynthetic BiologyMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationAdapter OligonucleotidesHiv Tat ProteinGene VectorHivMedicineGenome EditingBiomolecular EngineeringGene Transfer
The synthesis of a gene for the HIV TAT protein is described using a novel approach that capitalises on the ability to synthesise oligonucleotides of greater than 100 bp in length. It involves the synthesis of large oligomers covering one strand of the desired gene in its entirety and the use of small complementary bridging and adapter oligonucleotides to direct the assembly and cloning of the large oligomers. After ligation to the cloning vector the partially single stranded intermediate is transformed directly into the recipient bacterial host where the plasmid is repaired. The synthetic tat gene has been expressed in HeLa cells and is shown to trans-activate TAR+ but not TAR- HIV LTR-CAT constructs.
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