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Dive into the research topics where Gregory J. S. Lohman is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregory J. S. Lohman.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Efficient DNA ligation in DNA-RNA hybrid helices by Chlorella virus DNA ligase.

Gregory J. S. Lohman; Yinhua Zhang; Alexander M. Zhelkovsky; Eric J. Cantor; Thomas C. Evans

Single-stranded DNA molecules (ssDNA) annealed to an RNA splint are notoriously poor substrates for DNA ligases. Herein we report the unexpectedly efficient ligation of RNA-splinted DNA by Chlorella virus DNA ligase (PBCV-1 DNA ligase). PBCV-1 DNA ligase ligated ssDNA splinted by RNA with kcat ≈ 8 x 10−3 s−1 and KM < 1 nM at 25°C under conditions where T4 DNA ligase produced only 5′-adenylylated DNA with a 20-fold lower kcat and a KM ≈ 300 nM. The rate of ligation increased with addition of Mn2+, but was strongly inhibited by concentrations of NaCl >100 mM. Abortive adenylylation was suppressed at low ATP concentrations (<100 µM) and pH >8, leading to increased product yields. The ligation reaction was rapid for a broad range of substrate sequences, but was relatively slower for substrates with a 5′-phosphorylated dC or dG residue on the 3′ side of the ligation junction. Nevertheless, PBCV-1 DNA ligase ligated all sequences tested with 10-fold less enzyme and 15-fold shorter incubation times than required when using T4 DNA ligase. Furthermore, this ligase was used in a ligation-based detection assay system to show increased sensitivity over T4 DNA ligase in the specific detection of a target mRNA.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

A high-throughput assay for the comprehensive profiling of DNA ligase fidelity

Gregory J. S. Lohman; Robert J. Bauer; Nicole M. Nichols; Laurie Mazzola; Joanna Bybee; Danielle Rivizzigno; Elizabeth Cantin; Thomas C. Evans

DNA ligases have broad application in molecular biology, from traditional cloning methods to modern synthetic biology and molecular diagnostics protocols. Ligation-based detection of polynucleotide sequences can be achieved by the ligation of probe oligonucleotides when annealed to a complementary target sequence. In order to achieve a high sensitivity and low background, the ligase must efficiently join correctly base-paired substrates, while discriminating against the ligation of substrates containing even one mismatched base pair. In the current study, we report the use of capillary electrophoresis to rapidly generate mismatch fidelity profiles that interrogate all 256 possible base-pair combinations at a ligation junction in a single experiment. Rapid screening of ligase fidelity in a 96-well plate format has allowed the study of ligase fidelity in unprecedented depth. As an example of this new method, herein we report the ligation fidelity of Thermus thermophilus DNA ligase at a range of temperatures, buffer pH and monovalent cation strength. This screen allows the selection of reaction conditions that maximize fidelity without sacrificing activity, while generating a profile of specific mismatches that ligate detectably under each set of conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Inhibitory Effect of Non-Substrate and Substrate DNA on the Ligation and Self-Adenylylation Reactions Catalyzed by T4 DNA Ligase

Robert J. Bauer; Thomas C. Evans; Gregory J. S. Lohman

DNA ligases are essential both to in vivo replication, repair and recombination processes, and in vitro molecular biology protocols. Prior characterization of DNA ligases through gel shift assays has shown the presence of a nick site to be essential for tight binding between the enzyme and its dsDNA substrate, with no interaction evident on dsDNA lacking a nick. In the current study, we observed a significant substrate inhibition effect, as well as the inhibition of both the self-adenylylation and nick-sealing steps of T4 DNA ligase by non-nicked, non-substrate dsDNA. Inhibition by non-substrate DNA was dependent only on the total DNA concentration rather than the structure; with 1 μg/mL of 40-mers, 75-mers, or circular plasmid DNA all inhibiting ligation equally. A >15-fold reduction in T4 DNA ligase self-adenylylation rate when in the presence of high non-nicked dsDNA concentrations was observed. Finally, EMSAs were utilized to demonstrate that non-substrate dsDNA can compete with nicked dsDNA substrates for enzyme binding. Based upon these data, we hypothesize the inhibition of T4 DNA ligase by non-nicked dsDNA is direct evidence for a two-step nick-binding mechanism, with an initial, nick-independent, transient dsDNA-binding event preceding a transition to a stable binding complex in the presence of a nick site.


bioRxiv | 2018

Optimization of Golden Gate assembly through application of ligation sequence-dependent fidelity and bias profiling

Potapov Vladimir; Jennifer Ong; Rebecca Kucera; Bradley W. Langhorst; Katharina Bilotti; John M. Pryor; Eric J. Cantor; Barry Canton; Thomas F. Knight; Thomas C. Evans; Gregory J. S. Lohman

Modern synthetic biology depends on the manufacture of large DNA constructs from libraries of genes, regulatory elements or other genetic parts. Type IIS restriction enzyme-dependent DNA assembly methods (e.g., Golden Gate) enable rapid one-pot, ordered, multi-fragment DNA assembly, facilitating the generation of high-complexity constructs. The order of assembly of genetic parts is determined by the ligation of flanking Watson-Crick base-paired overhangs. The ligation of mismatched overhangs leads to erroneous assembly, and the need to avoid such pairings has typically been accomplished by using small sets of empirically vetted junction pairs, limiting the number of parts that can be joined in a single reaction. Here, we report the use of a comprehensive method for profiling end-joining ligation fidelity and bias to predict highly accurate sets of connections for ligation-based DNA assembly methods. This data set allows quantification of sequence-dependent ligation efficiency and identification of mismatch-prone pairings. The ligation profile accurately predicted junction fidelity in ten-fragment Golden Gate assembly reactions, and enabled efficient assembly of a lac cassette from up to 24-fragments in a single reaction. Application of the ligation fidelity profile to inform choice of junctions thus enables highly flexible assembly design, with >20 fragments in a single reaction.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

A single-molecule sequencing assay for the comprehensive profiling of T4 DNA ligase fidelity and bias during DNA end-joining

Vladimir Potapov; Jennifer Ong; Bradley W. Langhorst; Katharina Bilotti; Dan Cahoon; Barry Canton; Thomas F. Knight; Thomas C. Evans; Gregory J. S. Lohman

Abstract DNA ligases are key enzymes in molecular and synthetic biology that catalyze the joining of breaks in duplex DNA and the end-joining of DNA fragments. Ligation fidelity (discrimination against the ligation of substrates containing mismatched base pairs) and bias (preferential ligation of particular sequences over others) have been well-studied in the context of nick ligation. However, almost no data exist for fidelity and bias in end-joining ligation contexts. In this study, we applied Pacific Biosciences Single-Molecule Real-Time sequencing technology to directly sequence the products of a highly multiplexed ligation reaction. This method has been used to profile the ligation of all three-base 5′-overhangs by T4 DNA ligase under typical ligation conditions in a single experiment. We report the relative frequency of all ligation products with or without mismatches, the position-dependent frequency of each mismatch, and the surprising observation that 5′-TNA overhangs ligate extremely inefficiently compared to all other Watson–Crick pairings. The method can easily be extended to profile other ligases, end-types (e.g. blunt ends and overhangs of different lengths), and the effect of adjacent sequence on the ligation results. Further, the method has the potential to provide new insights into the thermodynamics of annealing and the kinetics of end-joining reactions.


BMC Proceedings | 2012

A fast solution to NGS library preparation with low nanogram DNA input.

Pingfang Liu; Gregory J. S. Lohman; Eric J. Cantor; Bradley W. Langhorst; Erbay Yigit; Lynne Apone; Daniela Munafo; Christine Sumner; Fiona J. Stewart; Thomas C. Evans; Nicole M. Nichols; Eileen T. Dimalanta; Theodore B. Davis

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has significantly impacted human genetics, enabling a comprehensive characterization of human genome as well as better understanding of many genomic abnormalities. By delivering massive DNA sequences at unprecedented speed and cost, NGS promises to make personalized medicine a reality in the foreseeable future. To date, library construction with clinical samples has been a challenge, primarily due to the limited quantities of sample DNA available. To overcome this challenge, we have developed a fast library preparation method using novel NEBNext reagents and adaptors, including a new DNA polymerase that has been optimized to minimize GC bias. This method enables library construction from an amount of DNA as low as 5 ng, and can be used for both intact and fragmented DNA. Moreover, the workflow is compatible with multiple NGS platforms.


Archive | 2013

Novel Ligase Activity

Gregory J. S. Lohman; Thomas C. Evans; Larry A. McReynolds


Archive | 2015

Compositions and Methods for Improvement of Ligation Yields

Gregory J. S. Lohman; Nicole M. Nichols


Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2013

A Fast Solution to NGS Library Prep with Low Nanogram DNA Input.

Pingfang Liu; Gregory J. S. Lohman; Eric J. Cantor; Bradley W. Langhorst; Erbay Yigit; Lynne Apone; Daniela Munafo; Fiona J. Stewart; Thomas C. Evans; Nicole M. Nichols; Eileen T. Dimalanta; Theodore B. Davis; Christine Sumner


Current Protocols in Molecular Biology | 2001

UNIT 3.14 DNA Ligases

Gregory J. S. Lohman; Stanley Tabor; Nicole M. Nichols

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