Transcriptionally Active Polymerase Chain Reaction (TAP)

An approach is described for makingtranscriptionally active PCR (TAP) fragments that were used directly in in vitro and in vivo expression experiments. TAP fragments encoding reporter genes were amplified in 1 day using typical PCR methodology and were expressed in cultured cells and in mice at leve...

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Published inThe Journal of biological chemistry Vol. 277; no. 5; pp. 3593 - 3598
Main Authors Liang, Xiaowu, Teng, Andy, Braun, Dawn M., Felgner, Jiin, Wang, Yan, Baker, Scott I., Chen, Shizong, Zelphati, Olivier, Felgner, Philip L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.02.2002
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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Summary:An approach is described for makingtranscriptionally active PCR (TAP) fragments that were used directly in in vitro and in vivo expression experiments. TAP fragments encoding reporter genes were amplified in 1 day using typical PCR methodology and were expressed in cultured cells and in mice at levels comparable with a widely used cytomegalovirus promoter-based plasmid expression vector. Following intramuscular injection, a TAP fragment encoding hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) induced anti-HBsAg antibody titers comparable with those induced by supercoiled plasmid encoding the same antigen. Epitope-tagged TAP fragments were generated and transfected into cells for rapid, high throughput immunocytochemical analysis of the tagged gene products. TAP fragments were also transferred directly into expression vectors by in vivo homologous recombination without conventional cloning, affording a high throughput cloning approach that does not require restriction enzyme digestion, ligations, or thymidine adenine complementation cloning. The methodology has been adapted to a robotic work station enabling the high throughput generation of transcriptionally active genes at the rate of more than 400 different genes per day. This technology offers a practical approach to directly utilize genome sequence data to generate functional proteomes.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M110652200