E

Eric C. Olivares

Invitae (United States)

Publishes on CRISPR and Genetic Engineering, Virus-based gene therapy research, RNA Interference and Gene Delivery. 17 papers and 3.7k citations.

17Publications
3.7kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

A phage integrase directs efficient site-specific integration in human cells
Amy C. Groth, Eric C. Olivares, Bhaskar Thyagarajan et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2000
Cited by 502Open Access

The integrase from the Streptomyces phage phiC31 carries out efficient recombination between the attP site in the phage genome and the attB site in the host bacterial chromosome. In this paper, we show that the enzyme also functions in human cells. A plasmid assay system was constructed that measured intramolecular integration of attP into attB. This assay was used to demonstrate that in the presence of the phiC31 integrase, precise unidirectional integration occurs with an efficiency of 100% in Escherichia coli and >50% in human cells. This assay system was also used to define the minimal sizes of attB and attP at 34 bp and 39 bp, respectively. Furthermore, precise and efficient intermolecular integration of an incoming plasmid bearing attP into an established Epstein-Barr virus plasmid bearing attB was documented in human cells. This work is a demonstration of efficient, site-specific, unidirectional integration in mammalian cells. These observations form the basis for site-specific integration strategies potentially useful in a broad range of genetic engineering applications.

Site-Specific Genomic Integration in Mammalian Cells Mediated by Phage φC31 Integrase
Bhaskar Thyagarajan, Eric C. Olivares, Roger P. Hollis et al.|Molecular and Cellular Biology|2001
Cited by 408Open Access

We previously established that the phage phiC31 integrase, a site-specific recombinase, mediates efficient integration in the human cell environment at attB and attP phage attachment sites on extrachromosomal vectors. We show here that phage attP sites inserted at various locations in human and mouse chromosomes serve as efficient targets for precise site-specific integration. Moreover, we characterize native "pseudo" attP sites in the human and mouse genomes that also mediate efficient integrase-mediated integration. These sites have partial sequence identity to attP. Such sites form naturally occurring targets for integration. This phage integrase-mediated reaction represents an effective site-specific integration system for higher cells and may be of value in gene therapy and other chromosome engineering strategies.