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Dive into the research topics where Brian M. Baynes is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian M. Baynes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Pairwise selection assembly for sequence-independent construction of long-length DNA.

William J. Blake; Brad Chapman; Anuradha Zindal; Michael E. Lee; Shaun M. Lippow; Brian M. Baynes

The engineering of biological components has been facilitated by de novo synthesis of gene-length DNA. Biological engineering at the level of pathways and genomes, however, requires a scalable and cost-effective assembly of DNA molecules that are longer than ∼10 kb, and this remains a challenge. Here we present the development of pairwise selection assembly (PSA), a process that involves hierarchical construction of long-length DNA through the use of a standard set of components and operations. In PSA, activation tags at the termini of assembly sub-fragments are reused throughout the assembly process to activate vector-encoded selectable markers. Marker activation enables stringent selection for a correctly assembled product in vivo, often obviating the need for clonal isolation. Importantly, construction via PSA is sequence-independent, and does not require primary sequence modification (e.g. the addition or removal of restriction sites). The utility of PSA is demonstrated in the construction of a completely synthetic 91-kb chromosome arm from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Creation of a type IIS restriction endonuclease with a long recognition sequence

Shaun M. Lippow; Patti M. Aha; Matthew H. Parker; William J. Blake; Brian M. Baynes; Dasa Lipovsek

Type IIS restriction endonucleases cleave DNA outside their recognition sequences, and are therefore particularly useful in the assembly of DNA from smaller fragments. A limitation of type IIS restriction endonucleases in assembly of long DNA sequences is the relative abundance of their target sites. To facilitate ligation-based assembly of extremely long pieces of DNA, we have engineered a new type IIS restriction endonuclease that combines the specificity of the homing endonuclease I-SceI with the type IIS cleavage pattern of FokI. We linked a non-cleaving mutant of I-SceI, which conveys to the chimeric enzyme its specificity for an 18-bp DNA sequence, to the catalytic domain of FokI, which cuts DNA at a defined site outside the target site. Whereas previously described chimeric endonucleases do not produce type IIS-like precise DNA overhangs suitable for ligation, our chimeric endonuclease cleaves double-stranded DNA exactly 2 and 6 nt from the target site to generate homogeneous, 5′, four-base overhangs, which can be ligated with 90% fidelity. We anticipate that these enzymes will be particularly useful in manipulation of DNA fragments larger than a thousand bases, which are very likely to contain target sites for all natural type IIS restriction endonucleases.


Archive | 2005

Methods for assembly of high fidelity synthetic polynucleotides

George M. Church; Noubar B. Afeyan; Joseph M. Jacobson; Brian M. Baynes; Kenneth Gabriel Nesmith; Brad Chapman; Bettina Strack-Logue


Archive | 2007

Nucleic acid library design and assembly

Dasa Lipovsek; Brian M. Baynes


Archive | 2006

Compositions and methods for protein design

George M. Church; Brian M. Baynes


Archive | 2007

Libraries and their design and assembly

Brian M. Baynes; Dasa Lipovsek; Subhayu Basu


Archive | 2012

Polymeric acid catalysts and uses thereof

John M. Geremia; Brian M. Baynes; Ashish Dhawan


Archive | 2007

Combined extension and ligation for nucleic acid assembly

Brian M. Baynes; Brad Chapman; Lee Kamentsky


Archive | 2005

Biological systems analysis

Noubar B. Afeyan; Aram Adourian; Amir A. Handzel; Brian M. Baynes


Archive | 2007

Methods for nucleic acid sorting and synthesis

George M. Church; Francisco Cerrina; Brian M. Baynes; Edmund R. Pitcher

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Dasa Lipovsek

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Shaun M. Lippow

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Joseph M. Jacobson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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