RNA-peptide fusions for the <i>in vitro</i> selection of peptides and proteins

Richard W. Roberts(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jack W. Szostak(Massachusetts General Hospital)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 11, 1997
Cited by 1,090Open Access
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Abstract

Covalent fusions between an mRNA and the peptide or protein that it encodes can be generated by in vitro translation of synthetic mRNAs that carry puromycin, a peptidyl acceptor antibiotic, at their 3' end. The stable linkage between the informational (nucleic acid) and functional (peptide) domains of the resulting joint molecules allows a specific mRNA to be enriched from a complex mixture of mRNAs based on the properties of its encoded peptide. Fusions between a synthetic mRNA and its encoded myc epitope peptide have been enriched from a pool of random sequence mRNA-peptide fusions by immunoprecipitation. Covalent RNA-peptide fusions should provide an additional route to the in vitro selection and directed evolution of proteins.


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