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      A high-throughput microfluidic method for generating and characterizing transcription factor mutant libraries.

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          Abstract

          Characterizing libraries of mutant proteins is a challenging task, but can lead to detailed functional insights on a specific protein, and general insights for families of proteins such as transcription factors. Challenges in mutant protein screening consist in synthesizing the necessary expression-ready DNA constructs and transforming them into a suitable host for protein expression. Protein purification and characterization are also non-trivial tasks that are not easily scalable to hundreds or thousands of protein variants. Here we describe a method based on a high-throughput microfluidic platform to screen and characterize the binding profile of hundreds of transcription factor variants. DNA constructs are synthesized by a rapid two-step PCR approach without the need of cloning or transformation steps. All transcription factor mutants are expressed on-chip followed by characterization of their binding specificities against 64 different DNA target sequences. The current microfluidic platform can synthesize and characterize up to 2,400 protein-DNA pairs in parallel. The platform method is also generally applicable, allowing high-throughput functional studies of proteins.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Methods Mol. Biol.
          Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
          Springer Nature America, Inc
          1940-6029
          1064-3745
          2012
          : 813
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Biological Network Characterization, EPFL Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
          Article
          10.1007/978-1-61779-412-4_6
          22083738
          26cc5541-e9ce-4c7d-bd8f-ad7d6ae5ed1b
          History

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