Phage N15-Based Vectors for Gene Cloning and Expression in Bacteria and Mammalian Cells

Wong, Yin Cheng and Ng, Allan Wee Ren and Chen, Qingwen and Liew, Pei Sheng and Lee, Choon Weng and Sim, Edmund Ui Hang and Kumaran, Narayanan (2023) Phage N15-Based Vectors for Gene Cloning and Expression in Bacteria and Mammalian Cells. ACS Synthetic Biology, 12 (4). pp. 909-921. ISSN 2161-5063

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Wong et al. (2023) Phage N15 vectors, Review, ACS Synthetic Biology.pdf

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Official URL: https://pubs.acs.org/journal/asbcd6

Abstract

Bacteriophage N15 is the first virus known to deliver linear prophage into Escherichia coli. During its lysogenic cycle, N15 protelomerase (TelN) resolves its telomerase occupancy site (tos) into hairpin telomeres. This protects the N15 prophage from bacterial exonuclease degradation, enabling it to stably replicate as a linear plasmid in E. coli. Interestingly, purely proteinaceous TelN can retain phage DNA linearization and hairpin formation without involving host- or phage-derived intermediates or cofactors in the heterologous environment. This unique feature has led to the advent of synthetic linear DNA vector systems derived from the TelN-tos module for the genetic engineering of bacterial and mammalian cells. This review will focus on the development and advantages of N15-based novel cloning and expression vectors in the bacterial and mammalian environments. To date, N15 is the most widely exploited molecular tool for the development of linear vector systems, especially the production of therapeutically useful miniDNA vectors without a bacterial backbone. Compared to typical circular plasmids, linear N15-based plasmids display remarkable cloning fidelity in propagating unstable repetitive DNA sequences and large genomic fragments. Additionally, TelNlinearized vectors with the relevant origin of replication can replicate extrachromosomally and retain transgenes functionality in bacterial and mammalian cells without compromising host cell viability. Currently, this DNA linearization system has shown robust results in the development of gene delivery vehicles, DNA vaccines and engineering mammalian cells against infectious diseases or cancers, highlighting its multifaceted importance in genetic studies and gene medicine.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Bacteria, DNA replication, Genetics, Genomics, Peptides and proteins
Subjects: Q Science > Q Science (General)
Divisions: Academic Faculties, Institutes and Centres > Faculty of Resource Science and Technology
Faculties, Institutes, Centres > Faculty of Resource Science and Technology
Depositing User: Ui Hang
Date Deposited: 22 May 2023 08:15
Last Modified: 12 Jul 2023 07:41
URI: http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/41839

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