Faster, cheaper way to synthesise DNA developed

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

Scientists have pioneered a new way to synthesise sequences through a creative use of enzymes that promises to be faster, cheaper and more accurate.

"Nature makes biomolecules using enzymes, and those enzymes are amazingly good at handling and copying Typically our organic chemistry processes are not anywhere close to the precision that natural enzymes offer," said Sebastian Palluk, graduate student at Institute (JBEI) in the US.

The idea of using an to make DNA is not new - scientists have been trying for decades to find a way to do it, without success.

The of choice is called TdT (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase), which is found in the immune system of vertebrates and is one of the few enzymes in nature that writes new DNA from scratch rather than copying DNA.

The problem with existing approaches to using enzymes for is that the of the is not large enough to accept the nucleotide with a blocking group attached.

"People have basically tried to 'dig a hole' in the enzyme by mutating it to make room for this blocking group," said Daniel Arlow, a graduate student JBEI.

This is tricky because it can interfere with the activity of the enzyme, said Arlow.

"Instead of trying to dig a hole in the enzyme, what we do is tether one nucleotide to each TdT enzyme via a cleavable linker," he said.

"That way, after extending a DNA molecule using its tethered nucleotide, the enzyme has no other nucleotides available to add, so it stops," Arlow said.

"A key advantage of this approach is that the backbone of the DNA - the part that actually does the - is just like natural DNA, so we can try to get the full speed out of the enzyme," he said.

"Our dream is to make a gene overnight. Where we're trying to produce fuels and from biomass, is a key step. If you speed that up, it could drastically accelerate the whole process of discovery," Arlow said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 20 2018. 16:45 IST