Xintian Li
University of Hong Kong
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Publication
Featured researches published by Xintian Li.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
James A. Sawitzke; Nina Costantino; Xintian Li; Lynn C. Thomason; Mikhail Bubunenko; Carolyn Court; Donald L. Court
Recombination with single-strand DNA oligonucleotides (oligos) in Escherichia coli is an efficient and rapid way to modify replicons in vivo. The generation of nucleotide alteration by oligo recombination provides novel assays for studying cellular processes. Single-strand exonucleases inhibit oligo recombination, and recombination is increased by mutating all four known exonucleases. Increasing oligo concentration or adding nonspecific carrier oligo titrates out the exonucleases. In a model for oligo recombination, λ Beta protein anneals the oligo to complementary single-strand DNA at the replication fork. Mismatches are created, and the methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) system acts to eliminate the mismatches inhibiting recombination. Three ways to evade MMR through oligo design include, in addition to the desired change (1) a C·C mismatch 6 bp from that change; (2) four or more adjacent mismatches; or (3) mismatches at four or more consecutive wobble positions. The latter proves useful for making high-frequency changes that alter only the target amino acid sequence and even allows modification of essential genes. Efficient uptake of DNA is important for oligo-mediated recombination. Uptake of oligos or plasmids is dependent on media and is 10,000-fold reduced for cells grown in minimal versus rich medium. Genomewide engineering technologies utilizing recombineering will benefit from both optimized recombination frequencies and a greater understanding of how biological processes such as DNA replication and cell division impact recombinants formed at multiple chromosomal loci. Recombination events at multiple loci in individual cells are described here.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2006
Michael S.Y. Huen; Xintian Li; Lin-Yu Lu; Rory M. Watt; De-Pei Liu; Jian-Dong Huang
Targeted gene repair mediated by single-stranded oligonucleotides (SSOs) has great potential for use in functional genomic studies and gene therapy. Genetic changes have been created using this approach in a number of prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, including mouse embryonic stem cells. However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully established. In one of the current models, the ‘annealing-integration’ model, the SSO anneals to its target locus at the replication fork, serving as a primer for subsequent DNA synthesis mediated by the host replication machinery. Using a λ-Red recombination-based system in the bacterium Escherichia coli, we systematically examined several fundamental premises that form the mechanistic basis of this model. Our results provide direct evidence strongly suggesting that SSO-mediated gene repair is mechanistically linked to the process of DNA replication, and most likely involves a replication intermediate. These findings will help guide future experiments involving SSO-mediated gene repair in mammalian and prokaryotic cells, and suggest several mechanisms by which the efficiencies may be reliably and substantially increased.
Molecular Microbiology | 2013
Xintian Li; Lynn C. Thomason; James A. Sawitzke; Nina Costantino; Donald L. Court
Synthetic single‐strand oligonucleotides (oligos) with homology to genomic DNA have proved to be highly effective for constructing designed mutations in targeted genomes, a process referred to as recombineering. The cellular functions important for this type of homologous recombination have yet to be determined. Towards this end, we have identified Escherichia coli functions that process the recombining oligo and affect bacteriophage λ Red‐mediated oligo recombination. To determine the nature of oligo processing during recombination, each oligo contained multiple nucleotide changes: a single base change allowing recombinant selection, and silent changes serving as genetic markers to determine the extent of oligo processing during the recombination. Such oligos were often not incorporated into the host chromosome intact; many were partially degraded in the process of recombination. The position and number of these silent nucleotide changes within the oligo strongly affect both oligo processing and recombination frequency. Exonucleases, especially those associated with DNA Polymerases I and III, affect inheritance of the silent nucleotide changes in the oligos. We demonstrate for the first time that the major DNA polymerases (Pol I and Pol III) and DNA ligase are directly involved with oligo recombination.
Methods in Enzymology | 2013
James A. Sawitzke; Lynn C. Thomason; Mikhail Bubunenko; Xintian Li; Nina Costantino; Donald L. Court
Recombineering provides the ability to make rapid, precise, and inexpensive genetic alterations to any DNA sequence, either in the chromosome or cloned onto a vector that replicates in E. coli (or other recombineering-proficient bacteria), and to do so in a highly efficient manner. Complicated genetic constructs that are impossible to make with in vitro genetic engineering can be created in days with recombineering. Recombineering with single-strand DNA (ssDNA) can be used to create single or multiple clustered point mutations, small or large (up to 10kb) deletions, and small (10-20 base) insertions such as sequence tags. Using optimized conditions, point mutations can be made with such high frequencies that they can be found without selection. This technology excels at creating both directed and random mutations.
Genetics | 2017
Mikhail Bubunenko; Carolyn Court; Alison J. Rattray; Deanna Gotte; Maria L. Kireeva; Jorge A. Irizarry-Caro; Xintian Li; Ding J. Jin; Donald L. Court; Jeffrey N. Strathern; Mikhail Kashlev
We made a coupled genetic reporter that detects rare transcription misincorporation errors to measure RNA polymerase transcription fidelity in Escherichia coli. Using this reporter, we demonstrated in vivo that the transcript cleavage factor GreA, but not GreB, is essential for proofreading of a transcription error where a riboA has been misincorporated instead of a riboG. A greA mutant strain had more than a 100-fold increase in transcription errors relative to wild-type or a greB mutant. However, overexpression of GreB in ΔgreA cells reduced the misincorporation errors to wild-type levels, demonstrating that GreB at high concentration could substitute for GreA in RNA proofreading activity in vivo.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2003
Xintian Li; Nina Costantino; Lin-Yu Lu; De-Pei Liu; Rory M. Watt; Kathryn S. E. Cheah; Donald L. Court; Jian-Dong Huang
Methods in Enzymology | 2013
James A. Sawitzke; Lynn C. Thomason; Mikhail Bubunenko; Xintian Li; Nina Costantino; Donald L. Court
Archive | 2004
Donald L. Court; Xintian Li; Jian-Dong Huang; Nina Costantino; De-Pei Liu
Archive | 2014
Recombination Lynn; C. Thomason; James A. Sawitzke; Xintian Li; Nina Costantino; Donald L. Court
Archive | 2013
Zai Wang; Wq Xue; Raozhou Lin; Xintian Li; Ju Cui; Jian-Dong Huang