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Lynn C. Thomason

Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research

ORCID: 0000-0002-1699-3807

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Bacteriophages and microbial interactions, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering. 47 papers and 4.1k citations.

47Publications
4.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

<i>E. coli</i> Genome Manipulation by P1 Transduction
Lynn C. Thomason, Nina Costantino, Donald L. Court|Current Protocols in Molecular Biology|2007
Cited by 633

This unit describes the procedure used to move portions of the E. coli genome from one genetic variant to another. Fragments of approximately 100 kb can be transferred by the P1 bacteriophage. The phage is first grown on a strain containing the elements to be moved, and the resulting phage lysate is used to infect a second recipient strain. The lysate will contain bacterial DNA as well as phage DNA, and genetic recombination, catalyzed by enzymes of the recipient strain, will incorporate the bacterial fragments into the recipient chromosome.

Genetic Engineering Using Homologous Recombination
Donald L. Court, James A. Sawitzke, Lynn C. Thomason|Annual Review of Genetics|2002
Cited by 516

In the past few years, in vivo technologies have emerged that, due to their efficiency and simplicity, may one day replace standard genetic engineering techniques. Constructs can be made on plasmids or directly on the Escherichia coli chromosome from PCR products or synthetic oligonucleotides by homologous recombination. This is possible because bacteriophage-encoded recombination functions efficiently recombine sequences with homologies as short as 35 to 50 base pairs. This technology, termed recombineering, is providing new ways to modify genes and segments of the chromosome. This review describes not only recombineering and its applications, but also summarizes homologous recombination in E. coli and early uses of homologous recombination to modify the bacterial chromosome. Finally, based on the premise that phage-mediated recombination functions act at replication forks, specific molecular models are proposed.

Recombineering: Genetic Engineering in Bacteria Using Homologous Recombination
Lynn C. Thomason, James A. Sawitzke, Xintian Li et al.|Current Protocols in Molecular Biology|2014
Cited by 396

The bacterial chromosome and bacterial plasmids can be engineered in vivo by homologous recombination using PCR products and synthetic oligonucleotides as substrates. This is possible because bacteriophage-encoded recombination proteins efficiently recombine sequences with homologies as short as 35 to 50 bases. Recombineering allows DNA sequences to be inserted or deleted without regard to location of restriction sites. This unit first describes preparation of electrocompetent cells expressing the recombineering functions and their transformation with dsDNA or ssDNA. It then presents support protocols that describe several two-step selection/counter-selection methods of making genetic alterations without leaving any unwanted changes in the targeted DNA, and a method for retrieving onto a plasmid a genetic marker (cloning by retrieval) from the Escherichia coli chromosome or a co-electroporated DNA fragment. Additional protocols describe methods to screen for unselected mutations, removal of the defective prophage from recombineering strains, and other useful techniques.