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Dive into the research topics where Jared W. Ellefson is active.

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Featured researches published by Jared W. Ellefson.


Nature Biotechnology | 2014

Directed evolution of genetic parts and circuits by compartmentalized partnered replication

Jared W. Ellefson; Adam J. Meyer; Randall A. Hughes; Joe R. Cannon; Jennifer S. Brodbelt; Andrew D. Ellington

Most existing directed evolution methods, both in vivo and in vitro, suffer from inadvertent selective pressures (i.e., altering organism fitness), resulting in the evolution of products with unintended or suboptimal function. To overcome these barriers, here we present compartmentalized partnered replication (CPR). In this approach, synthetic circuits are linked to the production of Taq DNA polymerase so that evolved circuits that most efficiently drive Taq DNA polymerase production are enriched by exponential amplification during a subsequent emulsion PCR step. We apply CPR to evolve a T7 RNA polymerase variant that recognizes an orthogonal promoter and to reengineer the tryptophanyl tRNA-synthetase:suppressor tRNA pair from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to efficiently and site-specifically incorporate an unnatural amino acid into proteins. In both cases, the CPR-evolved parts were more orthogonal and/or more active than variants evolved using other methods. CPR should be useful for evolving any genetic part or circuit that can be linked to Taq DNA polymerase expression.


Science | 2016

Synthetic evolutionary origin of a proofreading reverse transcriptase.

Jared W. Ellefson; Jimmy Gollihar; Raghav Shroff; Haridha Shivram; Vishwanath R. Iyer; Andrew D. Ellington

Making error-free DNA from RNA DNA polymerase enzymes copy DNA into new strands of identical DNA. Reverse transcriptase (RT) enzymes copy RNA into DNA. Unlike many DNA polymerases, RT enzymes do not have a proofreading function that checks for errors in the newly synthesized DNA. Ellefson et al. use in vitro directed evolution and protein engineering to build an error-correcting RT from a prokaryotic DNA polymerase. The RT “xenopolymerase” shows increased fidelity as compared to natural RTs and should streamline and increase the precision of transcriptomics methods. Science, this issue p. 1590 In vitro evolution and protein engineering have converted a DNA polymerase into an error-checking reverse transcriptase enzyme. Most reverse transcriptase (RT) enzymes belong to a single protein family of ancient evolutionary origin. These polymerases are inherently error prone, owing to their lack of a proofreading (3′- 5′ exonuclease) domain. To determine if the lack of proofreading is a historical coincidence or a functional limitation of reverse transcription, we attempted to evolve a high-fidelity, thermostable DNA polymerase to use RNA templates efficiently. The evolutionarily distinct reverse transcription xenopolymerase (RTX) actively proofreads on DNA and RNA templates, which greatly improves RT fidelity. In addition, RTX enables applications such as single-enzyme reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction and direct RNA sequencing without complementary DNA isolation. The creation of RTX confirms that proofreading is compatible with reverse transcription.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Bacteriophages use an expanded genetic code on evolutionary paths to higher fitness

Michael J. Hammerling; Jared W. Ellefson; Daniel R. Boutz; Edward M. Marcotte; Andrew D. Ellington; Jeffrey E. Barrick

Bioengineering advances have made it possible to fundamentally alter the genetic codes of organisms. However, the evolutionary consequences of expanding an organisms genetic code with a non-canonical amino acid are poorly understood. Here we show that bacteriophages evolved on a host that incorporates 3-iodotyrosine at the amber stop codon acquired neutral and beneficial mutations to this new amino acid in their proteins, demonstrating that an expanded genetic code increases evolvability.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

Abiotic Self-Replication

Adam J. Meyer; Jared W. Ellefson; Andrew D. Ellington

The key to the origins of life is the replication of information. Linear polymers such as nucleic acids that both carry information and can be replicated are currently what we consider to be the basis of living systems. However, these two properties are not necessarily coupled. The ability to mutate in a discrete or quantized way, without frequent reversion, may be an additional requirement for Darwinian evolution, in which case the notion that Darwinian evolution defines life may be less of a tautology than previously thought. In this Account, we examine a variety of in vitro systems of increasing complexity, from simple chemical replicators up to complex systems based on in vitro transcription and translation. Comparing and contrasting these systems provides an interesting window onto the molecular origins of life. For nucleic acids, the story likely begins with simple chemical replication, perhaps of the form A + B → T, in which T serves as a template for the joining of A and B. Molecular variants capable of faster replication would come to dominate a population, and the development of cycles in which templates could foster one anothers replication would have led to increasingly complex replicators and from thence to the initial genomes. The initial genomes may have been propagated by RNA replicases, ribozymes capable of joining oligonucleotides and eventually polymerizing mononucleotide substrates. As ribozymes were added to the genome to fill gaps in the chemistry necessary for replication, the backbone of a putative RNA world would have emerged. It is likely that such replicators would have been plagued by molecular parasites, which would have been passively replicated by the RNA world machinery without contributing to it. These molecular parasites would have been a major driver for the development of compartmentalization/cellularization, as more robust compartments could have outcompeted parasite-ridden compartments. The eventual outsourcing of metabolic functions (including the replication of nucleic acids) to more competent protein enzymes would complete the journey from an abiotic world to the molecular biology we see today.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2016

Addicting diverse bacteria to a noncanonical amino acid

Drew Tack; Jared W. Ellefson; Ross Thyer; Bo Wang; Jimmy Gollihar; Matthew T Forster; Andrew D. Ellington

Engineered orthogonal translation systems have greatly enabled the expansion of the genetic code using noncanonical amino acids (NCAAs). However, the impact of NCAAs on organismal evolution remains unclear, in part because it is difficult to force the adoption of new genetic codes in organisms. By reengineering TEM-1 β-lactamase to be dependent on a NCAA, we maintained bacterial NCAA dependence for hundreds of generations without escape.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2015

Directed Evolution of a Panel of Orthogonal T7 RNA Polymerase Variants for in Vivo or in Vitro Synthetic Circuitry.

Adam J. Meyer; Jared W. Ellefson; Andrew D. Ellington

T7 RNA polymerase is the foundation of synthetic biological circuitry both in vivo and in vitro due to its robust and specific control of transcription from its cognate promoter. Here we present the directed evolution of a panel of orthogonal T7 RNA polymerase:promoter pairs that each specifically recognizes a synthetic promoter. These newly described pairs can be used to independently control up to six circuits in parallel.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2012

An in vitro Autogene

Eric A. Davidson; Adam J. Meyer; Jared W. Ellefson; Matthew Levy; Andrew D. Ellington

Recent technological advances have allowed development of increasingly complex systems for in vitro evolution. Here, we describe an in vitro autogene composed of a self-amplifying T7 RNA polymerase system. Functional autogene templates in cell-free lysate produce T7 RNA polymerase, which amplifies the autogene genetic information through a positive feedback architecture. Compartmentalization of individual templates within a water-in-oil emulsion links genotype and phenotype, allowing evolution.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2015

In Vitro Selection for Small-Molecule-Triggered Strand Displacement and Riboswitch Activity.

Laura Martini; Adam J. Meyer; Jared W. Ellefson; John N. Milligan; Michele Forlin; Andrew D. Ellington; Sheref S. Mansy

An in vitro selection method for ligand-responsive RNA sensors was developed that exploited strand displacement reactions. The RNA library was based on the thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) riboswitch, and RNA sequences capable of hybridizing to a target duplex DNA in a TPP regulated manner were identified. After three rounds of selection, RNA molecules that mediated a strand exchange reaction upon TPP binding were enriched. The enriched sequences also showed riboswitch activity. Our results demonstrated that small-molecule-responsive nucleic acid sensors can be selected to control the activity of target nucleic acid circuitry.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2018

Identification of tumor-reactive B cells and systemic IgG in breast cancer based on clonal frequency in the sentinel lymph node

Jonathan R. McDaniel; Stephanie C. Pero; William N. Voss; Girja S. Shukla; Yu-Jing Sun; Sebastian Schaetzle; Chang-Han Lee; Andrew P. Horton; Seth P. Harlow; Jimmy Gollihar; Jared W. Ellefson; Christopher C. Krag; Yuri Tanno; Nikoletta Sidiropoulos; George Georgiou; Gregory C. Ippolito; David N. Krag

A better understanding of antitumor immune responses is the key to advancing the field of cancer immunotherapy. Endogenous immunity in cancer patients, such as circulating anticancer antibodies or tumor-reactive B cells, has been historically yet incompletely described. Here, we demonstrate that tumor-draining (sentinel) lymph node (SN) is a rich source for tumor-reactive B cells that give rise to systemic IgG anticancer antibodies circulating in the bloodstream of breast cancer patients. Using a synergistic combination of high-throughput B-cell sequencing and quantitative immunoproteomics, we describe the prospective identification of tumor-reactive SN B cells (based on clonal frequency) and also demonstrate an unequivocal link between affinity-matured expanded B-cell clones in the SN and antitumor IgG in the blood. This technology could facilitate the discovery of antitumor antibody therapeutics and conceivably identify novel tumor antigens. Lastly, these findings highlight the unique and specialized niche the SN can fill in the advancement of cancer immunotherapy.


Current protocols in molecular biology | 2014

Library Generation by Gene Shuffling

Adam J. Meyer; Jared W. Ellefson; Andrew D. Ellington

This unit describes the process of gene shuffling, also known as sexual PCR. Gene shuffling is a facile method for the generation of sequence libraries containing the information from a family of related genes. Essentially, related genes are fragmented by DNase I digestion and reassembled by primer‐less PCR. The resulting chimeric genes can then be screened or selected for a desired function. Curr. Protoc. Mol. Biol. 105:15.12.1‐15.12.7.

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Andrew D. Ellington

University of Texas at Austin

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Adam J. Meyer

University of Texas at Austin

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Jimmy Gollihar

University of Texas at Austin

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Raghav Shroff

University of Texas at Austin

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Ross Thyer

University of Texas at Austin

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Adam J Meyer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Andrew P. Horton

University of Texas at Austin

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Arti Pothukuchy

University of Texas at Austin

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Bo Wang

University of Texas at Austin

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Chang-Han Lee

University of Texas at Austin

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