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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Coupling mutagenesis and parallel deep sequencing to probe essential residues in a genome or gene

Author Affiliations
Harvard University, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research
Published InProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year2013
Citations46

Abstract

The sequence of a protein determines its function by influencing its folding, structure, and activity. Similarly, the most conserved residues of orthologous and paralogous proteins likely define those most important. The detection of important or essential residues is not always apparent via sequence alignments because these are limited by the depth of any given gene's phylogeny, as well as specificities that relate to each protein's unique biological origin. Thus, there is a need for robust and comprehensive ways of evaluating the importance of specific amino acid residues of proteins of known or unknown function. Here we describe an approach called Mut-seq, which allows the identification of virtually all of the essential residues present in a whole genome through the application…
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