Bacterial type II phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases), required for the activation of many cellular mega-synthases, have been validated as promising drug targets in several pathogens. Activation of the blue-pigment-synthesizing nonribosomal peptide synthetase BpsA by a target PPTase can be used to screen for new antibiotic candidates from chemical libraries. For a complete screening platform, there is a need to also counter-screen inhibitors for cross-reactivity with the endogenous human Type II PPTase (hPPTase), as this is a likely source of toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDirected enzyme evolution is now a routine approach to improve desirable biocatalytic properties. When only a low-throughput screen is available to detect improved variants from a mutant gene library, it is imperative that cloning efficiency be maximized during library synthesis to avoid wasting effort screening empty plasmids. To achieve this we developed pUCXKT, a gain-of-function positive selection expression vector.
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