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Timestamp: 2015-04-27 12:34:58
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Matched Legal Cases: ['Application No. 328', 'Application No. 7160', 'Application No. 298', 'Application No. 38198', 'Application No 298', 'Application No 298', 'Application No. 298', 'Art 1575']

Patent US6008025 - A mutated polymerase having lower exonuclease activity and an extension rate ... - Google PatentsSearch Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »Sign inAdvanced Patent SearchPatentsA modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 5% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification and a DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises the modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme...http://www.google.com/patents/US6008025?utm_source=gb-gplus-sharePatent US6008025 - A mutated polymerase having lower exonuclease activity and an extension rate of at least 30 bases/second at optimum temperature of about 75 degrees celsius while maintaining its residual activity at ph 8.8; improved dna amplificationAdvanced Patent SearchPublication numberUS6008025 APublication typeGrantApplication numberUS 08/902,632Publication dateDec 28, 1999Filing dateJul 29, 1997Priority dateJul 29, 1996Fee statusPaidAlso published asDE69725076D1, DE69725076T2, EP0822256A2, EP0822256A3, EP0822256B1Publication number08902632, 902632, US 6008025 A, US 6008025A, US-A-6008025, US6008025 A, US6008025AInventorsHideyuki Komatsubara, Masao Kitabayashi, Hideki Kamimura, Bunsei Kawakami, Yoshihisa Kawamura, Masahiro Takagi, Tadayuki ImanakaOriginal AssigneeToyo Boseki Kabushiki KaishaExport CitationBiBTeX, EndNote, RefManPatent Citations (5), Non-Patent Citations (5), Referenced by (23), Classifications (11), Legal Events (4) External Links: USPTO, USPTO Assignment, EspacenetA mutated polymerase having lower exonuclease activity and an extension rate of at least 30 bases/second at optimum temperature of about 75 degrees celsius while maintaining its residual activity at ph 8.8; improved dna amplification
US 6008025 AAbstract
A modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 5% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification and a DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises the modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification and an unmodified thermostable DNA polymerase having 3'-5' exonuclease activity or a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of a thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; a method for amplifying nucleic acid by use of said modified thermostable polymerase or said DNA polymerase composition; and a reagent therefor.
1. A modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 5% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the thermostable DNA polymerase before modification;a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second; being capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours; exhibiting activity at an optimum temperature of about 75� C.; having a molecular weight of 88 to 90 kDa; and an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of the amino acids at the 141-, 143-, 210and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid. 2. A modified thermostable DNA polymerase being free of a 3'-5' exonuclease activity;having a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second; being capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours; exhibiting activity at an optimum temperature of about 75� C.; having a molecular weight of 88 to 90 kDa; and an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of the amino acids at the 141-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid. 3. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the DNA extension rate is not less than 60 bases/second.
4. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1, wherein the 3'-5' exonuclease activity is reduced to about 1% or less.
5. The thermostable DNA polymerase according claim 1 or 2, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by another amino acid.
6. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 5, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 aspartic acid at the 141- position has been replace by alanine.
7. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 glutamic acid at the 143-position has been replaced by another amino acid.
8. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 7, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 glutamic acid at the 143-position has been replaced by alanine.
9. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position have been replaced by other amino acids.
10. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 9, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position have been replaced with alanine.
11. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by another amino acid.
12. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 11, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by aspartic acid.
13. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 tyrosine at the 311-position has been replaced by another amino acid.
14. The thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 13, wherein in SEQ ID NO: 2 tyrosine at the 311-position has been replaced by phenylalanine.
15. A method for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises reacting DNA as a template, primers, dNTP and the thermostable DNA polymerase of claim 1 or 2, thus extending the primers to synthesize a DNA primer extension product.
16. The method for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 15, wherein the primers are 2 kinds of oligonucleotide, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer.
17. The method for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 15, wherein heating and cooling are repeatedly carried out.
18. A kit for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises 2 kinds of primer, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, the thermostable DNA polymerase of claim 1 or 2, and a buffer solution.
19. A kit for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises 2 kinds of primer, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, the thermostable DNA polymerase of claim 1 or 2, magnesium ions, ammonium ions and/or potassium ions, BSA, a nonionic surface active agent, and a buffer solution.
20. A DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises first and second thermostable DNA polymerases, said first thermostable DNA polymerase comprising a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the first thermostable DNA polymerase before modification and said second thermostable DNA polymerase comprising a thermostable DNA polymerase having 3'-5' exonuclease activity or a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase before modification, said first and second thermostable DNA polymerases having a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second and being capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours, exhibit activity at an optimum temperature of about 75� C., have molecular weights of 88 to 90 kDa, and wherein said first thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of the amino acids at the 141-, 142-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid and wherein said second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 or an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of the amino acids at the 140-, 142- or 144-positions has been replaced by another amino acid.
21. The DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 20, wherein the DNA polymerase activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase is lower than the DNA polymerase activity of the first thermostable DNA polymerase.
22. The DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 20, wherein DNA polymerase activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase is 0.02 to 0.1 unit and the DNA polymerase activity of the first thermostable DNA polymerase is 2.5 units.
23. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase is reduced to about 1% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the thermostable DNA polymerase before modification.
24. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine; isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine; glutamic acid at the 143-position has been replaced by alanine; aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position respectively have been replaced by alanine; asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by aspartic acid; or tyrosine at the 311-position has been replaced by phenylalanine.
25. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine.
26. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine.
27. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which glutamic acid at the 143-position has been replaced by alanine.
28. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position have been replaced respectively by alanine.
29. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by aspartic acid.
30. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the first modified thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which tyrosine at the 311-position has been replaced by phenylalanine.
31. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has a 3'-5' exonuclease activity; andthe amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. 32. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase is a modified thermostable DNA polymerase that has a DNA polymerase activity and has 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; andan amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of the amino acids at the 140-, 142- or 144-positions has been replaced by another amino acid. 33. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase is a modified thermostable DNA polymerase that has 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; andan amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by an amino acid selected from the group consisting of aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine and lysine; or threonine at the 144-position has been replaced by valine. 34. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by aspartic acid.
35. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by glutamic acid.
36. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by asparagine.
37. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by glutamine.
38. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by lysine.
39. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine.
40. The DNA polymerase composition according to claim 20, wherein the second thermostable DNA polymerase has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which threonine at the 144-position has been replaced by valine.
41. A DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises first and second thermostable DNA polymerases;the first thermostable DNA polymerase comprising a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the first thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second; and an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine; isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine; glutamic acid at the 143position has been replaced by alanine; aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position respectively have been replaced by alanine; asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by aspartic acid; or tyrosine at the 311-position has been replaced by phenylalanine; the second thermostable DNA polymerase having a 3'-5' exonuclease activity; a DNA extension rate of at least 120 bases/second; and the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, or the second thermostable DNA polymerase comprises a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 100 to 30% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the second thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; a DNA extension rate of at least 120 bases/second; and an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by an amino acid selected from the group consisting of aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine and lysine; or threonine at the 144-position has been replaced by valine and wherein each of said first and second thermostable DNA polymerases is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours, exhibits activity at an optimum temperature of about 75� C. and has a molecular weight of 88 to 90 kDa. 42. A DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises first and second thermostable DNA polymerases;the first thermostable DNA polymerase comprising a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the first thermostable DNA polymerase before modification; a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second; and an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which asparagine at the 210-position has been replaced by aspartic acid; the second thermostable DNA polymerase having a 3'-5' exonuclease activity; a DNA extension rate of at least 120 bases/second; and the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, and wherein each of said first and second thermostable DNA polymerases is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours, exhibits activity at an optimum temperature of about 75� C. and has a molecular weight of 88 to 90 kDa. 43. A method for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises reacting DNA as a template, primers, dNTP and the DNA polymerase composition of claim 20 thus extending the primers to synthesize a DNA primer extension product.
44. The method for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 43, wherein the primers are 2 kinds of oligonucleotide, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer.
45. The method for amplifying nucleic acid according to claim 46, wherein heating and cooling are repeatedly carried out.
46. A kit for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises the DNA polymerase composition of claim 20, divalent ions, monovalent ions, primers, dNTP, and a buffer solution.
47. A kit for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises the DNA polymerase composition of claim 20, magnesium ions, ammonium ions and/or potassium ions, 2 kinds of primer, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, BSA, a nonionic surface active agent, and a buffer solution.
48. A purified thermostable DNA polymerase having:1) an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 wherein isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine; 2) DNA polymerase activity and no more than 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of an enzyme having the amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2; 3) a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases per second; and 4) a molecular weight of from about 88 to about 90 kDa,wherein the thermostable DNA polymerase maintains 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8, determined at 25� C., after treatment at 95� C. for six hours and has an optimum temperature of about 75� C. 49. A thermostable DNA polymerase according to claim 1 or 2 wherein the amino acid at position 142 is arginine.
The present invention relates to a modified thermostable DNA polymerase, a DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, and a reagent for amplifying nucleic acid containing said enzyme or composition, as well as a method for amplifying nucleic acid by use of said reagent.
Conventionally, a large number of studies have been conducted on thermostable DNA polymerases for use in techniques for amplification of nucleic acid, such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) etc. Examples of thermostable DNA polymerases used in PCR are DNA polymerase (Tth polymerase) mostly derived from Thermus thermophilus and DNA polymerase (Taq polymerase) derived from Thermus aquaticus. Other known examples are DNA polymerases derived from a hyperthermophilic archaeon strain, such as thermostable DNA polymerase derived from Pyrococcus furiosus (Pfu polymerase, WO92/09689, Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 328,969/1993) and thermostable DNA polymerase derived from Thermococcus litoralis (Tli polymerase, Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 7160/1994).
The present inventors have previously found thermostable DNA polymerase excellent in thermostability and DNA extension rate derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD1 (KOD polymerase, Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 298,879/1995).
However, these thermostable DNA polymerases have problems such as insufficient amplification of nucleic acid. Further problems with polymerase derived from a hyperthermophilic archaeon strain such as Pyrococcus sp. KOD1. are that it has a 3'-5' exonuclease activity and there is a limit to PCR conditions including reaction time, enzyme amount, primer concentration etc. Therefore, there is demand for novel thermostable DNA polymerase.
As a result of their eager research, the present inventors have succeeded in creating a modified enzyme derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD1, said enzyme having the 3'-5' exonuclease activity reduced to 5% or less of the original polymerase before modification while maintaining the DNA extension rate and thermostability of the original polymerase.
The present inventors have further found that the efficiency of amplification using a polymerase before modification is improved by use of its modified thermostable DNA polymerase having a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second and capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C. because it was difficult to measure the pH at 95� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours, said modified enzyme having the 3'-5' exonuclease activity reduced to 5% or less of the polymerase before modification, and the present inventors thereby completed the present invention.
That is, the present invention is a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has 5% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification;
DNA extension rate: at least 30 bases/second; and
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours.
Further, the present invention is a method for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises reacting DNA as a template, primers, dNTP and the thermostable DNA polymerase of claims 1 to 3, thus extending the primers to synthesize DNA primer extension products.
Further, the present invention is a reagent for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises 2 kinds of primer, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, said thermostable DNA polymerase, and a buffer solution.
As one of methods for amplifying long chain nucleic acid, there is a report on PCR making use of both Taq polymerase (KlenTaq-278) free of 3'-5' exonuclease activity and Pfu polymerase (or Tli polymerase) having 3'-5' exonuclease activity, or of a DNA polymerase composition containing a mixture of their mutant enzymes (Barns, W. M. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91, 2216-2220).
There is another report on PCR making use of a polymerase composition containing a mixture of Tth polymerase free of 3'-5' exonuclease activity, Pfu polymerase (or Tli polymerase) with 3'-5' exonuclease activity, and thermostable DNA polymerase derived from Thermotoga maritima (Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 38198/1996).
Higher efficiency of amplification can be attained by such a composition than by one kind of DNA polymerase but is still not sufficient because 2 kinds of DNA polymerase having different properties in thermostability and DNA extension rate are used. Hence, there has been demand for a method further excellent in efficiency of amplification.
As a result of their eager research under these circumstances, the present inventors found that PCR excellent in efficiency of amplification can be effected using a DNA polymerase composition for nucleic acid amplification, consisting of a combination of first and second DNA polymerases being almost identical to each other with respect to thermostability and DNA extension rate, the activity of the second DNA polymerase being present at a lower level than that of the first DNA polymerase, specifically a DNA polymerase composition comprising DNA polymerases selected from the group consisting of a modified thermostable DNA polymerase (first polymerase) having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the naturally occurring enzyme before modification and a modified thermostable DNA polymerase (second polymerase) having 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of a naturally occurring DNA polymerase or of its original naturally occurring enzyme before modification.
That is, the present invention is a DNA polymerase composition for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the original enzyme before modification (first polymerase) and the original enzyme or a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having 100 to 6% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of its original thermostable enzyme before modification (second polymerase), said first and second DNA polymerases having a DNA extension rate of at least 30 bases/second and capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours.
Further, the present invention is a method for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises reacting DNA as a template, primers, dNTP and said DNA polymerase composition, thus extending the primers to synthesize a DNA primer extension product.
Further, the present invention is a reagent for amplifying nucleic acid, which comprises 2 kinds of primer, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, said DNA polymerase composition, divalent ions, monovalent ions, and a buffer solution.
FIG. 1A shows the activity of KOD polymerase and degree of DNA decomposition.
FIG. 1B shows the activity of IQ polymerase and degree of DNA decomposition.
FIG. 2 shows the thermostability of the modified DNA polymerase.
FIG. 3 shows the result of PCR by use of the modified DNA polymerase (for plasmid).
FIG. 4 shows the result of PCR by use of the modified DNA polymerase (for human genome).
FIG. 5 shows the result of PCR by use of the DNA polymerase composition (for human genome).
FIG. 6 shows the amino acid sequences of the exo regions of the thermostable DNA polymerase.
FIG. 7 shows the polymerase activity of the modified DNA polymerase and degree of decomposition of DNA.
FIG. 8 shows polymerase activity relative to the naturally occurring KOD polymerase.
In the present invention, DNA polymerase activity refers to a catalytic activity to introduce deoxyribonucleoside-5'-monophosphate template-dependently into deoxyribonucleic acid by covalently binding the aphosphate of deoxyribonucleoside-5'-triphosphate to the 3'-hydroxyl group of an oligonucleotide or polynucleotide annealed to a template DNA.
If the enzyme activity in a sample is high, activity measurement shall be carried out after the sample is diluted with a preserving buffer solution. In the present invention, 25 μl of Solution A below, 5 μl each of Solutions B and C below, and 10 μl of sterilized water are added to an Eppendorf tube, then stirred and mixed, and 5 μl of the above enzyme solution is added to it and reacted at 75� C. for 10 minutes. Thereafter, the sample is cooled on ice, and 50 μl of Solution E and 100 μl of Solution D below are added to it, then stirred, and cooled on ice for 10 minutes. The solution is filtered through a glass filter (Wattman GF/C Filter), and the filter is washed intensively with Solution D and ethanol, and the radioactivity of the filter is counted in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard) to determine the incorporation of the nucleotide into the template DNA. In the present invention, 1 unit of the enzyme activity shall be defined as the amount of the enzyme causing 10 nmol nucleotide per 30 minutes to be incorporated into the acid insoluble fragment under these conditions.
______________________________________A:     40 mM       Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)   16 mM magnesium chloride   15 mM dithiothreitol   100 &#956;g/ml BSA  B: 2 &#956;g/&#956;l activated calf thymus DNA  C: 1.5 mM dNTP (250 cpm/pmol [3 H] dTTP)  D: 20% trichloroacetic acid    2 mM sodium pyrrophosphate)  E: 1 &#956;g/&#956;l carrier DNA______________________________________
In the present invention, the 3'-5' exonuclease activity refers to the activity of deleting a 3'-terminal region of DNA to deliver 5'-mononucleotide to a template.
The activity measurement method is as follows: 50 μl reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 5 μg of E. coli DNA labeled with tritium) is pipetted into a 1.5 ml Eppendorf tube, followed by adding DNA polymerase to it. After the mixture is reacted at 75� C. for 10 minutes, the reaction is terminated by cooling on ice. Then, 50 μl of 0.1% BSA is added to it as a carrier, and then 100 μl of a solution containing 10% trichloroacetic acid and 2% sodium pyrrophosphate is mixed with it. After the mixture is left on ice for 15 minutes, it is centrifuged at 12,000 r.p.m. for 10 minutes to separate precipitates. 100 μl of the supernatant is measured for radioactivity in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard) whereby the amount of the nucleotide delivered to the acid soluble fragment is determined.
In the present invention, DNA extension rate refers to the number of DNAs extended per unit time. The measurement method is as follows: A reaction solution of DNA polymerase (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 8 mM magnesium chloride, 7.5 mM dithiothreitol, 100 μg/ml BSA, 0.1 mM dNTP, 0.2 μCi [α-32 P]dCTP) is reacted at 75� C. with a single-stranded chain of M13mp18 DNA to which a prier had been annealed. The reaction is terminated by adding an equal volume of a reaction terminating solution (50 mM sodium hydroxide, 10 mM EDTA, 5% Ficoll, 0.05 Bromophenol Blue). The DNA extended by the reaction is fractionated by electrophoresis on alkali agarose gel, and the gel is dried and subjected to autoradiography. As the DNA size marker, labeled λ/HindIII is used. The DNA extension rate is determined on the basis of the DNA size as determined with a band of this marker as an indicator.
In the present invention, thermostability means residual activity at pH 8.8 (the pH value determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours.
One embodiment of the present invention is a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has 5% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the original enzyme before modification,
DNA extension rate: at least 30 bases/second,
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours,
optimum temperature: about 75� C.,
molecular weight: 88 to 90 kDa, and
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of amino acids at the 141-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid.
Another embodiment of the present invention is a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and is free of a 3'-5' exonuclease activity,
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours,
The thermostable DNA polymerase of the present invention before modification is an enzyme derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD as a hyperthermophilic archaeon strain isolated in Kodakara Island, Kagoshima prefecture, Japan. The microbial properties of KOD producing this enzyme is described in Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No 298,879/1995. This enzyme is produced by culturing this strain.
This enzyme has the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has a 3'-5' exonuclease activity,
DNA extension rate: at least 120 bases/second,
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
The preferable thermostable DNA polymerase of the present invention has an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of amino acids at the 141-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid. One example is the enzyme where in SEQ ID NO: 2 aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine; glutamic acid at the 143-position by alanine; aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position respectively by alanine; asparagine at the 210-position by aspartic acid; or tyrosine at the 311-position by phenylalanine.
For production of these modified enzymes, there is a method in which a gene coding for naturally occurring KOD polymerase is mutated so that a novel enzyme having a lower 3'-5' exonuclease activity than the naturally occurring KOD polymerase is produced by protein engineering.
Although the KOD polymerase-coding gene to be mutated is not particularly limited, a gene defined in SEQ ID NO: 3 in the Sequence Listing, derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD, was used in one embodiment of the present invention.
A DNA polymerase gene derived from the KOD1 strain contains 2 intervening sequences (1374 to 2453 bp and 2708 to 4316 bp), and therefore a modified DNA polymerase having 3'-5' exonuclease activity reduced can be obtained by e.g. preparing with a PCR fusion method a mature gene having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 from a gene as shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 and using the thus prepared gene.
In another embodiment of the present invention, a novel enzyme with a less 3'-5' activity than the naturally occurring KOD polymerase is produced by mutating a gene coding for the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1.
To mutate the naturally occurring KOD polymerase gene, any of the known methods can be used. For example, use can be made of methods which involve bringing a drug as a mutagen into contact with the naturally occurring KOD polymerase gene or irradiating the gene with UV ray, or of protein engineering means such as the PCR technique or site specific mutagenesis. E. coli, whose gene undergoes mutations frequently because its mismatch repair is destroyed, can also be used for in vivo mutation.
The Chameleon� site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) used in the present invention make use of the following steps: (1) denaturing a plasmid having a target gene inserted into it and then annealing a mutagenesis primer and a selective marker to said plasmid, (2) extending DNA by a DNA polymerase and then conducting ligation reaction using a ligase, (3) cleaving the plasmid with a restriction enzyme whose restriction site is not present in the selective primer but present in the plasmid serving as a template, whereby DNA which was not mutated is cleaved, (4) transforming E. coli with the remaining plasmid, (5) preparing the mutant plasmid from the transformant, followed by conducting (3) and (4) repeatedly so that the plasmid mutated as desired is obtained.
The modified polymerase gene obtained as described above is transformed into e.g. E. coli and then plated on a agar medium containing a drug such as ampicillin to form a colony. The colony is inoculated onto a nutrient medium such as LB medium or 2� YT medium, then cultured at 37� C. for 12 to 20 hours, and disrupted so that a crude enzyme solution is extracted from it.
To disrupt the microorganism, any of the known means by physical disruption by ultrasonication or glass beads or with lytic enzyme such as lysozyme can be used. The crude enzyme is thermally treated e.g. at 80� C. for 30 minutes to inactivate the polymerases originating in the host. Then, its DNA polymerase activity is determined and its 3'-5' exonuclease activity is determined and their activity ratio is determined. Then, this ratio is compared with that of the naturally occurring KOD polymerase in order to screen the enzyme having a reduced 3'-5' exonuclease activity.
From the strain selected in this manner, the DNA polymerase can be purified using any of the known means, for example as follows:
The microorganism cultured in a nutrient medium is recovered and disrupted enzymatically or by physical means so that a crude enzyme is extracted. The crude enzyme extract is subjected to heat treatment e.g. at 80� C. for 30 minutes and thereafter the KOD polymerase fraction is recovered by precipitation with sulfate ammonium. This crude enzyme fraction can be desalted by e.g. gel filtration on Sephadex G-25 (Pharmacia Biotech).
After this procedure, a purified enzyme preparation can be obtained by chromatography such as Q-Sepharose, heparin-Sepharose etc. In this process, the enzyme preparation can be purified to such a degree that it shows an almost single band in SDS-PAGE.
A DNA primer extension product can be produced using the modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the present invention by reacting primers and dNTP with DNA as a template to extend the primers. The primers are 2 kinds of oligonucleotide, one of which is preferably a primer complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer. Heating and cooling are carried out repeatedly.
Magnesium ions and ammonium ions and/or potassium ions are preferably coexistent for the DNA polymerase of the present invention to maintain its activity. The PCR reaction solution may further contain a buffer solution and these ions along with BSA and a nonionic surface active agent such as Triton X-100 in the buffer solution.
Because the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the present invention is reduced as compared with the enzyme before modification, PCR can be effected with higher efficiency of amplification by the modified thermostable DNA polymerase than by the enzyme before modification.
Hereinafter, the composition of at least 2 kinds of thermostable DNA polymerase which are different in their 3'-5' exonuclease activity is described.
A first DNA polymerase of the present invention is an enzyme having a 3'-5' exonuclease activity reduced to 0 to 5% preferably 1% or less of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification.
The first DNA polymerase includes an enzyme having an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of amino acids at the 141-, 142-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid. One example is an enzyme having an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine; glutamic acid at the 143-position by alanine; aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position respectively by alanine; asparagine at the 210-position by aspartic acid; or tyrosine at the 311-position by phenylalanine. Further, it includes the enzyme where isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by arginine.
The first DNA polymerase of the present invention includes a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification;
The first DNA polymerase of the present invention further includes a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it a DNA polymerase activity and has 0 to 5% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification;
DNA extension rate: at least 30 bases/second;
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours;
optimum temperature: about 75� C.;
molecular weight: 88 to 90 kDa; and
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of amino acids at the 141-, 142-, 143-, 210- and 311-positions has been replaced by another amino acid.
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours;
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position has been replaced by alanine; isoleucine at the 142-position by arginine; glutamic acid at the 143-position by alanine; aspartic acid at the 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position respectively by alanine; asparagine at the 210-position by aspartic acid; or tyrosine at the 311-position by phenylalanine.
The second DNA polymerase of the present invention includes a modified thermostable polymerase having 100 to 6% preferably 90 to 30% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of a thermostable DNA polymerase having a 3'-5' exonuclease activity or the original unmodified thermostable DNA polymerase having a 3'-5' exonuclease activity. The second DNA polymerase includes e.g. the enzyme with the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2 or with an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which amino acids at the 140-, 142-, or 144-position have been replaced by other amino acids. One example is the enzyme with an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which isoleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine or lysin, or threonine at the 144-position by valine.
The second DNA polymerase of the present invention includes a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has a 3'-5' exonuclease activity;
The second DNA polymerase of the present invention further includes a modified thermostable polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
action: it has a DNA polymerase activity and has 100 to 6% preferably 90 to 30% of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the enzyme before modification;
thermostability: it is capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours; and
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which at least one of amino acids X1, X2 and X3 in an X1 DX2 EX3 motif present in EXO 1 has been replaced by another amino acid.
In the amino acid sequence of the DNA polymerase with a 3'-5' exonuclease activity, highly preserving amino acid regions for this exonuclease activity are known (EXO I, EXO II and EXO III, FIG. 6). EXO I region contains an X1 DX2 EX3 motif, and the amino acids D (aspartic acid) and E (glutamic acid) are known to be essential for the exonuclease activity.
The second DNA polymerase of the present invention further includes a modified thermostable DNA polymerase having the following physicochemical properties:
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which amino acids at 140-, 142-, or 144-position have been replaced by other amino acids.
an amino acid sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in which is oleucine at the 142-position has been replaced by aspartic acid, glutamic acid, asparagine, glutamine or lysin, or threonine at the 144-position by valine.
The DNA extension rate of the first and second DNA polymerases is at least at least 30 bases/second, preferably 100 to 120 bases/second and they are thermostable DNA polymerases capable of maintaining 60% or more residual activity at pH 8.8 (determined at 25� C.) after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours.
The first and second DNA polymerases are preferably KOD polymerases or their mutants.
In the present invention, the activity of the second DNA polymerase is preferably low than that of the first DNA polymerase, and the second DNA polymerase is preferably 0.02 to 0.1 unit every 2.5 units of the first DNA polymerase.
To produce these modified enzymes, there is a method in which a gene coding for e.g. naturally occurring KOD polymerase is mutated so that the novel enzymes having reduced 3'-5' exonuclease activity as compared with the naturally occurring KOD polymerase are produced by protein engineering means.
The KOD polymerase-coding gene to be mutated is not particularly limited. In one embodiment of the present invention, the gene shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 in the Sequence Listing, derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD, was used.
In another embodiment of the present invention, a gene coding for the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 is mutated to produce the novel enzyme having the 3'-5' exonuclease activity reduced as compared with that of the naturally occurring KOD polymerase.
The thermostable DNA polymerase of the present invention before modification is an enzyme derived from Pyrococcus sp. KOD as 1 kind of hyperthermophilic archaeon strain isolated in Kodakara Island, Kagoshima prefecture, Japan. The microbial properties of KOD producing said enzyme are described in Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No 298,879/1995. Said enzyme is produced by culturing this strain.
DNA extension rate: at least 120 bases/second;
The method of amplifying nucleic acid according to the present invention comprises reacting DNA as a template, primers, and 4 kinds of deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate (dNTP) by use of said DNA polymerase composition, thus extending the primers to synthesize a DNA primer extension product.
In the PCR techniques as one method of amplifying nucleic acid according to the present invention, if a target nucleic acid in a sample is particularly long and double-stranded, then it is denatured by heating to be separated into single-stranded chains. If separation of the long chain nucleic acid into single-stranded chains is inadequate, subsequent annealing and extension reaction of the primers will be prevented. Then, the single-stranded chains as a template, primers complementary to said template, preferably primers one of which is complementary to another DNA extension product, and dNTP are reacted in a PCR reaction solution using the DNA polymerase composition of the present invention.
This reaction is carried out using a 2-stage temperature cycle, that is a high temperature stage for denaturing the nucleic acid to be amplified and a low temperature stage for annealing the primers to the denatured nucleic acid to initiate primer extension, and this cycle is repeated 25 to 40 times. Usually, 1 cycle consists of reaction at 94� C. for 0.5 to 1 minute and then at 68� C. for 0.5 to 10 minutes. The 2 primers are annealed to opposite strands of the template nucleic acid sequence, and an extension product starting at each primer is a copy complementary to the template nucleic acid, and the product is oriented so that it can hybridize to another primer when separated from the resulting double-stranded chain.
The reaction time is conducted preferably for a sufficient period until the extension reaction completes chain extension. For amplification of 20 kb or more nucleic acid, an annealing and extension time of at least 10 to 20 minutes is preferable.
A long chain nucleic acid is preferably protected from decomposition during amplification by using e.g. glycerol, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) etc.
The presence of a misincorporated nucleotide will finish chain extension earlier and the number of template chains for subsequent amplification will be decreased, resulting in reduction of efficiency of amplification of long chain nucleic acid. In the present invention, however, the nucleotide misincorporated during synthesis of a primer extension product will be removed because the 3'-5' exonuclease activity besides the DNA polymerase activity is present at a low level in the reaction solution, and the dominant polymerase activity enables complete chain extension.
The pH and composition for a reaction buffer, salts (divalent and monovalent ions), and the design of primers are important for efficiency of amplification of long chain nucleic acid.
Because the PCR reagent is prepared usually at room temperature before the denaturation step, the binding of primers to another primer or to a homologous part of a nucleic acid sequence may be caused. If an extension product is also formed by nonspecific binding of primers, the efficiency of amplification of the desired long chain product is reduced. To prevent nonspecific binding, "hot start method" such as addition of the enzyme after the reaction solution reaches a high temperature is preferably used.
Divalent ions e.g. magnesium ions and monovalent ions e.g. ammonium and/or potassium ions are preferably allowed to coexist to maintain the activity of the DNA polymerase of the present invention. Further, a buffer solution, such ions, BSA, a nonionic surface active agent (e.g. Triton X-100) and buffer solution may be present in the reaction solution for nucleic acid amplification.
The reagent for amplifying nucleic acid according to the present invention contains 2 primers, one of which is complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer, dNTP, said DNA polymerase composition, magnesium ions, ammonium ions and/or potassium ions, BSA, a nonionic surface active agent and a buffer solution.
In the present invention, the activity of the second DNA polymerase is preferably lower than that of the first DNA polymerase, and it is preferable that the second DNA polymerase is present in 0.02 to 0.1 unit every 2.5 units of the first DNA polymerase.
The reagent of the present invention may contain a solvent aid such as glycerin, DMSO, polyethylene glycol etc.
The buffer solution used includes a tris buffer, tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine (tricine buffer), N-bis(hydroxyethyl)glycine (bicine buffer) etc. The optimum buffer solution and pH depend on the DNA polymerase used. If KOD polymerase or its mutant is used in the present invention, a buffer solution is used at pH 7.5 to 9.2 (at 25� C.) at concentration of 10 to 50 mM, preferably 20 to 120 mM. Divalent cations are preferably magnesium ions, and magnesium chloride etc. are used. Their concentration is preferably 1 to 2 mM. Monovalent cations are preferably ammonium ions or potassium ions, and ammonium sulfate, potassium glutamate, potassium acetate etc. are used. Their concentration is preferably 2 to 50 mM. The primers used are 2 kinds of oligonucleotide, one of which is a primer complementary to a DNA extension product of another primer. Their concentration is preferably 0.2 to 1 μM.
Hereinafter, the present invention is described in detail with reference to the Examples.
Cloning of DNA Polymerase Gene Derived from Hyperthermophilic Archaeon Strain KOD
Hyperthermophilic archaeon strain KOD1 isolated in Kodakara Island, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan, was cultured at 95� C. and then recovered. Genomic DNA of hyperthermophilic archaeon strain KOD was prepared in a usual manner from the microorganism. Two primers were synthesized on the basis of preserving regions in the amino acid sequence of DNA polymerase (Pfu polymerase) derived from Pyrococcus furiosus. PCR was conducted using the 2 primers and the genomic DNA as a template.
The DNA fragment thus amplified by PCR was sequenced, and from the nucleotide sequence thus determined, its amino acid sequence was deduced. Then, the genomic DNA from the KOD1 strain was treated with restriction enzyme, and the digest was subjected to Southern hybridization with the above amplification DNA fragment as a probe to determine the size of a fragment coding for the DNA polymerase (about 4 to 7 kbp). Further, the DNA fragment of this size was recovered from the corresponding agarose gel and inserted into plasmid pBS (Stratagene). The mixture thus obtained was transformed into E. coli JM109 to prepare a library. Colony hybridization with the same probe as in the Southern hybridization was conducted so that a clone strain (E. coli JM109/pSBKOD1) considered to contain the DNA polymerase gene derived from the KOD1 strain was obtained from the library.
Plasmid pSBKOD1 was recovered from the clone strain (E. coli JM109/pSBKOD1) and sequenced in a usual manner. Its amino acid sequence was deduced from the nucleotide sequence thus determined. The DNA polymerase gene derived from the KOD1 strain consisted of 5010 bases and coded for 1670. amino acids (SEQ ID NO: 1).
To prepare a complete polymerase gene, 2 intervening sequences (1374 to 2453 bp and 2708 to 4316 bp) were removed by a PCR fusion method. Three pairs of primers were used in the PCR fusion method and each pair was used in PCR where the plasmid recovered from the cloned strain was used as a template, so that 3 fragments free of the intervening sequences were amplified. The primers used in PCR were designed such that they have the same sequence as a sequence binding to the target site, and that they have different restriction enzyme sites at the terminals, that is, they have an EcoRV site at the N-terminal and a BamHI site at the C-terminal. Then, a fragment located in the middle of the PCR amplification fragment was mixed with a fragment located at the N-terminal side, and PCR was conducted using the respective fragments as primers. Further, a fragment located in the middle of the PCR amplification fragment was mixed with a fragment located at the C-terminal side, and PCR was conducted using the respective fragments as primers. PCR was conducted again using the 2 kinds of fragment thus obtained to give a complete gene fragment which is free of the intervening sequences, has an EcoRV site at the N-terminal and a BamHI site at the C-terminal, and codes for the DNA polymerase derived from the KOD1 strain. Further, this gene was subcloned in expression vector PET-8c capable of inducing expression of the gene under T7 promoter. For this subcloning, the NcoI/BamHI sites on PET-8c and the restriction enzyme sites created above were used. A recombinant expression vector (pET-pol) was thus obtained. E. coli BL21 (DE3)/pET-pol has been deposited as FERM BP-5513 with the National Institute of Bioscience and HumanTechnology, Agency of Industrial Science and Technology, Japan.
Subcloning of the KOD Polymerase Gene
To modify thermostable DNA polymerase, the KOD polymerase gene was removed from plasmid pET-pol and subcloned in plasmid pBluescript as follows:
The KOD polymerase gene, about 2.3 kb long, was removed by digesting plasmid pET-pol with restriction enzymes XbaI and BamHI (Toyobo Co., Ltd.). A ligation kit (Ligation high, a product of Toyobo Co., Ltd.) was then used for ligation of this DNA fragment into plasmid pBluescript SK(-) previously digested with XbaI and BamHI. Then, the resulting plasmid was transformed into commercially available competent cells (competent high JM109, available from Toyobo Co., Ltd.).
The transformant was cultured at 35� C. for 16 hours in an LB agar medium containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin (1% Bacto-trypton, 0.5% yeast extract, 0.5% sodium chloride, 1.5% agar, produced by Gibco), and a plasmid was prepared from the resulting colonies. From its partial nucleotide sequence, this plasmid was confirmed to carry the KOD polymerase gene and it was designated plasmid pKOD1.
Preparation of Modified Gene (DA) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
Plasmid pKOD1 obtained in Example 1 was used to prepare a plasmid (PKODDA) carrying a gene for a modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the KOD polymerase of SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at the 141-position had been replaced by alanine.
For this preparation, a Chameleon site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) was used according to the manufacture's instructions.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 4. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 7. The mutant was confirmed by determining its nucleotide sequence. E. coli JM109 was transformed with the resulting plasmid to give JM109 (pKODDA).
6 L sterilized TB medium (described in p. A. 2 in Molecular Cloning) containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin was introduced into a 10-L jar fermenter. Into this medium was inoculated E. coli JM109 (pKODDA) which had been cultured at 30� C. for 16 hours in 50 ml LB medium (1% Bacto-trypton, 0.5% yeast extract, 0.5% sodium chloride, produced by Gibco) containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin in a 500-ml flask, and the microorganism was grown by shake culture at 35� C. for 12 hours under aeration. The microorganism was recovered from the culture by centrifugation, then suspended in 400 ml buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 80 mM KCl, 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 1 mM EDTA) and disrupted by ultrasonication to give a cell lysate.
The cell lysate was heated at 85� C. for 30 minutes and centrifuged to remove insoluble solids. The supernatant was treated with polyethylene imine for removal of nucleic acids, then fractionated with sulfate ammonium and subjected to chromatography on heparin-Sepharose. Finally, the buffer solution was replaced by a preserving buffer solution (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 50 mM potassium chloride, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1% Tween 20, 0.1% Nonidet� P40, 50% glycerin) so that the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (DA) was obtained.
In the purification described above, the measurement of DNA polymerase activity was conducted in the following manner. When the enzyme activity was high, the sample was measured after dilution with the preserving buffer solution.
______________________________________A:     40 mM       Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)   16 mM magnesium chloride   15 mM dithiothreitol   100 &#956;g/ml BSA  B: 2 &#956;g/&#956;l activated calf thymus DNA  C: 1.5 mM dNTP (250 cpm/pmol [3 H] dTTP)  D: 20% trichloroacetic acid    (2 mM sodium pyrrophosphate)  E: 1 &#956;g/&#956;l carrier DNA______________________________________
25 μl of Solution A, 5 μl each of Solutions B and C, and 10 μl sterilized water are added to an Eppendorf tube and mixed by stirring. Then, 5 μl of the enzyme solution is added to the mixture and reacted at 75� C. for 10 minutes. Thereafter, it is cooled on ice for 10 minutes, followed by adding 50 μl of Solution E and 100 μl of Solution D. The mixture was stirred and cooled on ice for 10 minutes. This solution is filtered through a glass filter (Wattman GF/C filter), followed by extensive washing with Solution D and ethanol, and the radioactivity of the filter was counted in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard) to determine the incorporation of the nucleotide into the template DNA.
1 unit of the enzyme is assumed to be the amount of the enzyme causing incorporation, into the acid insoluble fragment, of 10 nmol nucleotide every 30 minutes under these conditions.
Preparation of Modified Gene (EA) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A plasmid (PKODEA) carrying a gene for a modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the KOD polymerase of SEQ ID NO: 2 in which glutamine at the 143-position had been replaced by alanine was prepared in the same manner as in Example 2.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 5. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 8. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (EA) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 2.
Preparation of Modified Gene (DEA) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A plasmid (pKODDEA) carrying a gene for a modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the KOD polymerase of SEQ ID NO: 2 in which aspartic acid at 141-position and glutamic acid at the 143-position had been replaced by alanine respectively was prepared in the same manner as in Example 2. The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 4. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 6. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (DEA) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 2.
Preparation of Modified Gene (ND) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A plasmid (pKODND) carrying a gene for a modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the KOD polymerase of SEQ ID NO: 2 in which asparagine at 210-position had been replaced by aspartic acid was prepared in the same manner as in Example 2. The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 4. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 9. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (ND) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 2.
Preparation of Modified Gene (YF) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A plasmid (pKODYF) carrying a gene for a modified thermostable DNA polymerase of the KOD polymerase of SEQ ID NO: 2 in which tyrosine at 311-position had been replaced by phenylalanine was prepared in the same manner as in Example 2. The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 4. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 10. he modified thermostable DNA polymerase (YF) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 2.
Confirmation of Exonuclease Activity of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
The exonuclease activities of the modified thermostable DNA polymerases (DA, EA, DEA, ND and YF) obtained in Examples 2 to 6 were determined in the following manner. As the control, the naturally occurring KOD polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) was used. 50 μl of a reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 5 μg tritium-labeled E. coli DNA) was put to a 1.5 ml Eppendorf tube, and the DNA polymerase was added in amounts of 25, 50 and 100 units respectively. The naturally occurring KOD polymerase was used in amounts of 0.25, 0.5 and 1 unit respectively. After the mixture was reacted at 75� C. for 10 minutes, the reaction was terminated by cooling on ice. Then, 50 μl of 0.1% BSA was added as a carrier to it, and then 100 μl of a solution containing 10% trichloroacetic acid and 2% sodium pyrrophosphate was mixed with it. After the mixture was left for 15 minutes on ice, it is centrifuged at 12,000 r.p.m. for 10 minutes to separate the precipitates present. 100 μl of the supernatant was measured for radioactivity in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard) whereby the amount of the nucleotide delivered into the acid soluble fragment was determined.
FIG. 1 shows the polymerase activity of each DNA polymerase and the decomposition rate of DNA. In this result, the exonuclease activity of the 3 modified thermostable DNA polymerases (DEA, DA and EA) could not be detected. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (ND) had about 0.1%, and the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (YF) had about 0.01% of the activity of the naturally occurring KOD polymerase.
Confirmation of Thermostability
The thermostability of the modified thermostable DNA polymerases obtained in Examples 2 to 6 (DA, EA, DEA, ND and YF) was determined in the following manner. 5 units of each purified modified DNA polymerase was mixed with 100 μl buffer solution (20 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.8 at 25� C., 10 mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 2 mM magnesium sulfate, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.1 mg/ml BSA, 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol) and then pre-incubated at 95� C. A sample was recovered from this mixture with time, and its polymerase activity was determined in the method described in Example 2.
For comparison, Taq polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) and the naturally occurring KOD polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) were also subjected to the same procedure. As shown in FIG. 2, any of the modified thermostable DNA polymerases, similar to the naturally occurring KOD polymerase, had 60% or more residual activity after treatment at 95� C. for 6 hours. On the other hand, Taq polymerase had 15% or less residual activity.
Measurement of DNA Extension Rate
The modified thermostable DNA polymerases obtained in Examples 2 to 6 (DA, EA, DEA, ND and YF) was examined for DNA extension rate in the following manner. 0.2 μg of the primer (SEQ ID NO: 15) was annealed to a single-stranded chain of M13mp18 DNA, and then 1 unit of each purified modified DNA polymerase was reacted with the single-stranded chain at 75� C. for 20, 40, and 60 seconds respectively in 10 μl of a reaction solution (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 8 mM magnesium chloride, 7.5 mM dithiothreitol, 100 μg/ml BSA, 0.1 mM dNTP, 0.2 μCi [α-32 P]dCTP). The reaction was terminated by adding an equal volume of a reaction terminating solution (50 mM sodium hydroxide, 10 mM EDTA, 5% Ficoll, 0.05 Bromophenol Blue). For comparison, Taq polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) and the naturally occurring KOD polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) were also subjected to the same procedure.
The DNA extended by the reaction was fractionated by electrophoresis on alkali agarose gel, and the gel was dried and subjected to autoradiography. As a DNA size marker, labeled λ/HindIII was used. The DNA extension rate was determined using the size of the extended DNA determined with a band of this marker as an indicator. The result indicated that similar to the naturally occurring KOD polymerase, any of the modified polymerases had an extension rate of about 120 bases/second, while Taq polymerase had an extension rate of about 60 bases/second.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (IN) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
Plasmid pKOD1 obtained in Example 1 was used to prepare a plasmid (pKODIN) carrying a gene for modified thermostable DNA polymerase where in the X1 X2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by asparagine.
This plasmid was prepared using a Chameleon site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) according to the manufacture's instructions.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 17. The mutant was confirmed by determining its nucleotide sequence. E. coli JM109 was transformed with the plasmid to give JM109 (pKODIN).
Preparation of Mutant Gene (IE) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODIE) for KOD polymerase where in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by glutamic acid was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 18. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (IE) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (IO) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODIQ) for KOD polymerase where, in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by glutamic acid was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 19. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (IQ) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (ID) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODID) for KOD polymerase where, in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by aspartic acid was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 20. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (ID) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (TV) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODTV) for KOD polymerase where, in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, tyrosine at X3 had been replaced by valine was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 21. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (TV) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (IK) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODIK) for KOD polymerase where, in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by lysin was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 23. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (IK) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
Preparation of Mutant Gene (IR) and Purification of Modified Thermostable DNA Polymerase
A thermostable polymerase gene (pKODIR) for KOD polymerase where, in the X1 DX2 EX3 motif located in the EXO1 region, isoleucine at X2 had been replaced by arginine was prepared in the same manner as in Example 10.
The selective primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 16. The mutagenesis primer used was a primer as shown in SEQ ID NO: 22. The modified thermostable DNA polymerase (IR) was obtained using the same purification method as in Example 10.
The modified thermostable DNA polymerases obtained in Examples 10 to 16 (IN, IE, IQ, ID, YV, IK and IR) were examined for exonuclease activity in the following manner. As the control, the naturally occurring KOD polymerase (Toyobo Co. Ltd.) was used. 50 μl of a reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 MM MgCl2, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 5 μg of tritium-labeled E. coli DNA) was pipetted into a 1.5-ml Eppendorf tube, followed by adding each DNA polymerase in amounts of 0.5, 1, and 1.5 units respectively. After the mixture was reacted at 75� C. for 10 minutes, the reaction was terminated on cooling on ice. Then, 50 ml of 0.1% BSA was added to it as a carrier, and then 100 μl of a solution containing 10% trichloroacetic acid and 2% sodium pyrrophosphate was mixed with it. After the mixture was left on ice for 15 minutes, it was centrifuged at 12,000 r.p.m. for 10 minutes to separate the precipitates present. 100 μl of the supernatant was measured for radioactivity in a liquid scintillation counter (Packard) whereby the amount of the nucleotide delivered into the acid soluble fragment was determined.
FIG. 7 shows the polymerase activity of each DNA polymerase and the decomposition rate of DNA. FIG. 8 shows their exonuclease activities relative to that of the naturally occurring KOD polymerase. As shown therein, the thermostable DNA polymerases with the 3'-5' exonuclease activity at different levels can be obtained according to the present invention.
As compared with the naturally occurring KOD polymerase, the modified thermostable DNA polymerases had the 3'-5' exonuclease activity at the following levels: IN had about 95%; IE, about 76%; IQ, about 64%; ID, about 52%; TV, about 48%; IK, about 30%; and IR, about 0%.
Measurement of Fidelity of DNA Extension in PCR by Modified DNA Polymerase
The naturally occurring KOD polymerase, the modified thermostable DNA polymerases IE, ID, IK and IR, and Taq polymerase were examined for fidelity of DNA extension in PCR, as follows:
Plasmid pUR288 (described in Current Protocols in Molecular Biology 1.5.6) was cleaved with restriction enzyme ScaI. PCR was conducted using 1 ng of this plasmid and the primers of SEQ ID NOS: 13 and 14. After the reaction was finished, 5 μl of the reaction solution was subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis, and amplification of the about 5.3 kb target was confirmed. The remainder of the reaction solution was treated with phenol/chloroform and then precipitated with ethanol. The precipitate was dried and dissolved in 50 μl High buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT). Further, 10 units of restriction enzyme ScaI (Toyobo Co., Ltd.) were added to it and the mixture was reacted at 37� C. for 16 hours. The target amplification product was separated by agarose gel electrophoresis and its corresponding agarose gel was cut off from the gel. From the agarose, the target DNA was purified using Gene Clean 2 (BIO101). 10 ng of the DNA thus purified was diluted to 10 μl with TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 1 mM EDTA). To this solution was added 10 μl of a reaction solution from a ligation kit (Ligation high, Toyobo Co., Ltd.), and the mixture was reacted at 16� C. for 30 minutes. Then, the resulting DNA was transformed into commercially available competent cells (competent high JM109, Toyobo K.K.).
The transformant was cultured at 35� C. for 16 hours in an LB agar medium (1% Bacto-trypton, 0.5% yeast extract, 0.5% sodium chloride, 1.5% agar, produced by Gibco) containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin, 1 mM isopropylthio-β-galactoside (IPTG, Nakarai Tesque), 0.7% 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactoside (X-gal (Nakarai Tesque)) and then their colonies were counted. pUR288 carries the lacz gene (β-D-galactosidase). Therefore, if DNA extension has proceeded with fidelity during PCR, blue colonies are formed on the agar medium. On the contrary, if misincorporation has occurred during DNA extension, the activity of β-galactosidase encoded by the lacZ gene is reduced or lost, resulting in occurrence of pale blue or white colonies. Assuming these plate blue colonies and white colonies are mutant colonies, mutant frequency (%) was determined when each enzyme was used, and the results are shown in Table 1 below.
TABLE 1______________________________________        KOD  IE     ID     IK   IE   rTaq______________________________________Colonies in Total          2394   3267   4869 2826 1197 2831  Mutant Colonies  19  63  148  362  299  795  Mutant Frequency (%) 0.79  1.9  3.0  12.8  25.0  28.1______________________________________
As is evident from Table 1, the modified thermostable DNA polymerases IE, ID, IK and IR obtained in the present invention were inferior to the naturally occurring KOD polymerase, but they showed lower degrees of mutation than that of Taq polymerase, that is, they demonstrated higher fidelity in DNA extension.
PCR by Use of Modified DNA Polymerase (for Plasmid)
PCR was carried out using naturally occurring KOD polymerase (described in Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 298,879/1995) and the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (described in Example 5), as follows: 2.5 units of each enzyme were added to 50 μl of a reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 1 ng plasmid pBR322 rendered linear with restriction enzyme ScaI, and 10 pmol primers shown in SEQ ID NOS: 13 and 14), and PCR was carried out. The thermal cycler used was Model PJ2000 (Perkin Elmer). The reaction conditions were 94� C., 30 seconds 68� C., 2.5 minutes, and this cycle was repeated 25 times. Taq polymerase (Toyobo K.K.) was subjected to PCR in the same manner except that the reaction solution was 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.) containing 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 0.1% Triton X-100, 1 ng plasmid pBR322 rendered linear with restriction enzyme ScaI, and 10 pmol primers shown in SEQ ID NOS: 13 and 14. After the reaction was finished, 5 μl of the reaction solution was subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis, and amplification of the about 4.3 kb target was confirmed.
FIG. 3 shows the result of agarose gel electrophoresis. This result indicated that PCR amplification by the modified DNA polymerase was better than that by the naturally occurring KOD polymerase. Further, this amplification was better than that by Taq polymerase.
PCR by Use of Modified DNA Polymerase (for Human Genome)
PCR was carried out using the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (described in Example 5) as follows: 2.5 units of the enzyme were added to 50 μl of a reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 100 ng genomic DNA (Clontech) derived from human placenta, and 10 pmol primers shown in SEQ ID NOS: 11 and 12), and PCR was carried out. The thermal cycler used was Model PJ2000 (Perkin Elmer). The reaction conditions were 94� C., 30 seconds 68� C., 3 minutes, and this cycle was repeated 25 times.
For comparison, Taq polymerase (Toyobo K.K.) was also subjected to PCR in the same manner except that the reaction solution was 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.) containing 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 0.1% Triton X-100, 100 ng genomic DNA (Clontech) derived from human placenta, and 10 pmol primers shown in SEQ ID NOS: 11 and 12. After the reaction was finished, 5 μl of the reaction solution was subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis, and amplification of the about 4 kb target was confirmed. FIG. 4 shows the result of agarose gel electrophoresis. This result indicated that PCR amplification by the modified DNA polymerase was better than that by Taq polymerase.
PCR by Use of DNA Polymerase Composition (for Human Genome)
PCR was carried out using a mixture of the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (DA, EA, DEA, ND or YF) and naturally occurring KOD polymerase, as follows: 2.5 units of ND and 0.05 unit of KOD polymerase were added to 50 μl of a reaction solution (120 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8 at 25� C.), 10 mM KCl, 6 mM ammonium sulfate, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.001% BSA, 30 ng genomic DNA (Clontech) derived from human placenta, and 10 pmol primers shown in SEQ ID NOS: 11 and 12). The thermal cycler used was Model PJ2000 (Perkin Elmer). The reaction conditions were 94� C., 30 seconds → 68� C., 3 minutes, and this cycle was repeated 30 times.
For comparison, the modified thermostable DNA polymerase (ND), Taq polymerase (Toyobo Co., Ltd.), a commercial DNA polymerase mixture (ExTaq (Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd.), and Advantage Tth (Clontech) were subjected respectively to PCR using the same amounts of the genomic DNA and primers in the same manner except that the reaction solution was the buffer attached to the commercial product. After the reaction was finished, 5 μl of the reaction solution was subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis, and amplification of the about 4 kb target was confirmed. FIG. 5 shows the result of agarose gel electrophoresis. This result indicated that PCR amplification by a mixture of the modified DNA polymerase (ND) and the naturally occurring KOD polymerase was better than that by the commercial polymerase mixture.
Nucleic acid amplification excellent in efficiency of amplification can be effected by a mixture of 2 or more DNA polymerases which are almost identical to each other with respect to thermostability and DNA extension rate but are different in their 3'-5' exonuclease activity.
__________________________________________________________________________#             SEQUENCE LISTING   - -  - - (1) GENERAL INFORMATION:   - -    (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 23   - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1:   - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:       (A) LENGTH: 5342 base - #pairs       (B) TYPE: nucleic acid       (C) STRANDEDNESS: double       (D) TOPOLOGY: linear   - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: genomic DNA   - -     (vi) ORIGINAL SOURCE:       (A) ORGANISM: hyperthermop - #hilic archaeon       (B) STRAIN: KOD1   - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1:   - - GCTTGAGGGC CTGCGGTTAT GGGACGTTGC AGTTTGCGCC TACTCAAAGA TG -#CCGGTTTT     60   - - ATAACGGAGA AAAATGGGGA GCTATTACGA TCTCTCCTTG ATGTGGGGTT TA -#CAATAAAG    120   - - CCTGGATTGT TCTACAAGAT TATGGGGGAT GAAAG ATG ATC CTC - #GAC ACT GAC173              - #                  - #   Met Ile Leu Asp Thr Asp              - #                  - #                  - #   5  - - TAC ATA ACC GAG GAT GGA AAG CCT GTC ATA AG - #A ATT TTC AAG AAG GAA221 Tyr Ile Thr Glu Asp Gly Lys Pro Val Ile Ar - #g Ile Phe Lys Lys Glu         10     - #             15     - #             20  - - AAC GGC GAG TTT AAG ATT GAG TAC GAC CGG AC - #T TTT GAA CCC TAC TTC269 Asn Gly Glu Phe Lys Ile Glu Tyr Asp Arg Th - #r Phe Glu Pro Tyr Phe     25         - #         30         - #         35  - - TAC GCC CTC CTG AAG GAC GAT TCT GCC ATT GA - #G GAA GTC AAG AAG ATA317 Tyr Ala Leu Leu Lys Asp Asp Ser Ala Ile Gl - #u Glu Val Lys Lys Ile 40             - #     45             - #     50  - - ACC GCC GAG AGG CAC GGG ACG GTT GTA ACG GT - #T AAG CGG GTT GAA AAG365 Thr Ala Glu Arg His Gly Thr Val Val Thr Va - #l Lys Arg Val Glu Lys  55                 - # 60                 - # 65                 - # 70  - - GTT CAG AAG AAG TTC CTC GGG AGA CCA GTT GA - #G GTC TGG AAA CTC TAC413 Val Gln Lys Lys Phe Leu Gly Arg Pro Val Gl - #u Val Trp Lys Leu Tyr             75 - #                 80 - #                 85  - - TTT ACT CAT CCG CAG GAC GTC CCA GCG ATA AG - #G GAC AAG ATA CGA GAG461 Phe Thr His Pro Gln Asp Val Pro Ala Ile Ar - #g Asp Lys Ile Arg Glu         90     - #             95     - #            100  - - CAT GGA GCA GTT ATT GAC ATC TAC GAG TAC GA - #C ATA CCC TTC GCC AAG509 His Gly Ala Val Ile Asp Ile Tyr Glu Tyr As - #p Ile Pro Phe Ala Lys    105          - #       110          - #       115  - - CGC TAC CTC ATA GAC AAG GGA TTA GTG CCA AT - #G GAA GGC GAC GAG GAG557 Arg Tyr Leu Ile Asp Lys Gly Leu Val Pro Me - #t Glu Gly Asp Glu Glu120              - #   125              - #   130  - - CTG AAA ATG CTC GCC TTC GAC ATT GAA ACT CT - #C TAC CAT GAG GGC GAG605 Leu Lys Met Leu Ala Phe Asp Ile Glu Thr Le - #u Tyr His Glu Gly Glu 135                 1 - #40                 1 - #45                 1 -#50   - - GAG TTC GCC GAG GGG CCA ATC CTT ATG ATA AG - #C TAC GCC GAC GAGGAA      653  Glu Phe Ala Glu Gly Pro Ile Leu Met Ile Se - #r Tyr Ala Asp Glu Glu            155  - #               160  - #               165  - - GGG GCC AGG GTG ATA ACT TGG AAG AAC GTG GA - #T CTC CCC TAC GTT GAC701 Gly Ala Arg Val Ile Thr Trp Lys Asn Val As - #p Leu Pro Tyr Val Asp        170      - #           175      - #           180  - - GTC GTC TCG ACG GAG AGG GAG ATG ATA AAG CG - #C TTC CTC CGT GTT GTG749 Val Val Ser Thr Glu Arg Glu Met Ile Lys Ar - #g Phe Leu Arg Val Val    185          - #       190          - #       195  - - AAG GAG AAA GAC CCG GAC GTT CTC ATA ACC TA - #C AAC GGC GAC AAC TTC797 Lys Glu Lys Asp Pro Asp Val Leu Ile Thr Ty - #r Asn Gly Asp Asn Phe200              - #   205              - #   210  - - GAC TTC GCC TAT CTG AAA AAG CGC TGT GAA AA - #G CTC GGA ATA AAC TTC845 Asp Phe Ala Tyr Leu Lys Lys Arg Cys Glu Ly - #s Leu Gly Ile Asn Phe 215                 2 - #20                 2 - #25                 2 -#30   - - GCC CTC GGA AGG GAT GGA AGC GAG CCG AAG AT - #T CAG AGG ATG GGCGAC      893  Ala Leu Gly Arg Asp Gly Ser Glu Pro Lys Il - #e Gln Arg Met Gly Asp            235  - #               240  - #               245  - - AGG TTT GCC GTC GAA GTG AAG GGA CGG ATA CA - #C TTC GAT CTC TAT CCT941 Arg Phe Ala Val Glu Val Lys Gly Arg Ile Hi - #s Phe Asp Leu Tyr Pro        250      - #           255      - #           260  - - GTG ATA AGA CGG ACG ATA AAC CTG CCC ACA TA - #C ACG CTT GAG GCC GTT989 Val Ile Arg Arg Thr Ile Asn Leu Pro Thr Ty - #r Thr Leu Glu Ala Val    265          - #       270          - #       275  - - TAT GAA GCC GTC TTC GGT CAG CCG AAG GAG AA - #G GTT TAC GCT GAG GAA    1037 Tyr Glu Ala Val Phe Gly Gln Pro Lys Glu Ly - #s Val Tyr Ala Glu Glu280              - #   285              - #   290  - - ATA ACA CCA GCC TGG GAA ACC GGC GAG AAC CT - #T GAG AGA GTC GCC CGC    1085 Ile Thr Pro Ala Trp Glu Thr Gly Glu Asn Le - #u Glu Arg Val Ala Arg 295                 3 - #00                 3 - #05                 3 -#10   - - TAC TCG ATG GAA GAT GCG AAG GTC ACA TAC GA - #G CTT GGG AAG GAGTTC     1133  Tyr Ser Met Glu Asp Ala Lys Val Thr Tyr Gl - #u Leu Gly Lys Glu Phe            315  - #               320  - #               325  - - CTT CCG ATG GAG GCC CAG CTT TCT CGC TTA AT - #C GGC CAG TCC CTC TGG    1181 Leu Pro Met Glu Ala Gln Leu Ser Arg Leu Il - #e Gly Gln Ser Leu Trp        330      - #           335      - #           340  - - GAC GTC TCC CGC TCC AGC ACT GGC AAC CTC GT - #T GAG TGG TTC CTC CTC    1229 Asp Val Ser Arg Ser Ser Thr Gly Asn Leu Va - #l Glu Trp Phe Leu Leu    345          - #       350          - #       355  - - AGG AAG GCC TAT GAG AGG AAT GAG CTG GCC CC - #G AAC AAG CCC GAT GAA    1277 Arg Lys Ala Tyr Glu Arg Asn Glu Leu Ala Pr - #o Asn Lys Pro Asp Glu360              - #   365              - #   370  - - AAG GAG CTG GCC AGA AGA CGG CAG AGC TAT GA - #A GGA GGC TAT GTA AAA    1325 Lys Glu Leu Ala Arg Arg Arg Gln Ser Tyr Gl - #u Gly Gly Tyr Val Lys 375                 3 - #80                 3 - #85                 3 -#90   - - GAG CCC GAG AGA GGG TTG TGG GAG AAC ATA GT - #G TAC CTA GAT TTTAGA     1373  Glu Pro Glu Arg Gly Leu Trp Glu Asn Ile Va - #l Tyr Leu Asp Phe Arg            395  - #               400  - #               405  - - TGC CAT CCA GCC GAT ACG AAG GTT GTC GTC AA - #G GGG AAG GGG ATT ATA    1421 Cys His Pro Ala Asp Thr Lys Val Val Val Ly - #s Gly Lys Gly Ile Ile        410      - #           415      - #           420  - - AAC ATC AGC GAG GTT CAG GAA GGT GAC TAT GT - #C CTT GGG ATT GAC GGC    1469 Asn Ile Ser Glu Val Gln Glu Gly Asp Tyr Va - #l Leu Gly Ile Asp Gly    425          - #       430          - #       435  - - TGG CAG AGA GTT AGA AAA GTA TGG GAA TAC GA - #C TAC AAA GGG GAG CTT    1517 Trp Gln Arg Val Arg Lys Val Trp Glu Tyr As - #p Tyr Lys Gly Glu Leu440              - #   445              - #   450  - - GTA AAC ATA AAC GGG TTA AAG TGT ACG CCC AA - #T CAT AAG CTT CCC GTT    1565 Val Asn Ile Asn Gly Leu Lys Cys Thr Pro As - #n His Lys Leu Pro Val 455                 4 - #60                 4 - #65                 4 -#70   - - GTT ACA AAG AAC GAA CGA CAA ACG AGA ATA AG - #A GAC AGT CTT GCTAAG     1613  Val Thr Lys Asn Glu Arg Gln Thr Arg Ile Ar - #g Asp Ser Leu Ala Lys            475  - #               480  - #               485  - - TCT TTC CTT ACT AAA AAA GTT AAG GGC AAG AT - #A ATA ACC ACT CCC CTT    1661 Ser Phe Leu Thr Lys Lys Val Lys Gly Lys Il - #e Ile Thr Thr Pro Leu        490      - #           495      - #           500  - - TTC TAT GAA ATA GGC AGA GCG ACA AGT GAG AA - #T ATT CCA GAA GAA GAG    1709 Phe Tyr Glu Ile Gly Arg Ala Thr Ser Glu As - #n Ile Pro Glu Glu Glu    505          - #       510          - #       515  - - GTT CTC AAG GGA GAG CTC GCT GGC ATA CTA TT - #G GCT GAA GGA ACG CTC    1757 Val Leu Lys Gly Glu Leu Ala Gly Ile Leu Le - #u Ala Glu Gly Thr Leu520              - #   525              - #   530  - - TTG AGG AAA GAC GTT GAA TAC TTT GAT TCA TC - #C CGC AAA AAA CGG AGG    1805 Leu Arg Lys Asp Val Glu Tyr Phe Asp Ser Se - #r Arg Lys Lys Arg Arg 535                 5 - #40                 5 - #45                 5 -#50   - - ATT TCA CAC CAG TAT CGT GTT GAG ATA ACC AT - #T GGG AAA GAC GAGGAG     1853  Ile Ser His Gln Tyr Arg Val Glu Ile Thr Il - #e Gly Lys Asp Glu Glu            555  - #               560  - #               565  - - GAG TTT AGG GAT CGT ATC ACA TAC ATT TTT GA - #G CGT TTG TTT GGG ATT    1901 Glu Phe Arg Asp Arg Ile Thr Tyr Ile Phe Gl - #u Arg Leu Phe Gly Ile        570      - #           575      - #           580  - - ACT CCA AGC ATC TCG GAG AAG AAA GGA ACT AA - #C GCA GTA ACA CTC AAA    1949 Thr Pro Ser Ile Ser Glu Lys Lys Gly Thr As - #n Ala Val Thr Leu Lys    585          - #       590          - #       595  - - GTT GCG AAG AAG AAT GTT TAT CTT AAA GTC AA - #G GAA ATT ATG GAC AAC    1997 Val Ala Lys Lys Asn Val Tyr Leu Lys Val Ly - #s Glu Ile Met Asp Asn600              - #   605              - #   610  - - ATA GAG TCC CTA CAT GCC CCC TCG GTT CTC AG - #G GGA TTC TTC GAA GGC    2045 Ile Glu Ser Leu His Ala Pro Ser Val Leu Ar - #g Gly Phe Phe Glu Gly 615                 6 - #20                 6 - #25                 6 -#30   - - GAC GGT TCA GTA AAC AGG GTT AGG AGG AGT AT - #T GTT GCA ACC CAGGGT     2093  Asp Gly Ser Val Asn Arg Val Arg Arg Ser Il - #e Val Ala Thr Gln Gly            635  - #               640  - #               645  - - ACA AAG AAC GAG TGG AAG ATT AAA CTG GTG TC - #A AAA CTG CTC TCC CAG    2141 Thr Lys Asn Glu Trp Lys Ile Lys Leu Val Se - #r Lys Leu Leu Ser Gln        650      - #           655      - #           660  - - CTT GGT ATC CCT CAT CAA ACG TAC ACG TAT CA - #G TAT CAG GAA AAT GGG    2189 Leu Gly Ile Pro His Gln Thr Tyr Thr Tyr Gl - #n Tyr Gln Glu Asn Gly    665          - #       670          - #       675  - - AAA GAT CGG AGC AGG TAT ATA CTG GAG ATA AC - #T GGA AAG GAC GGA TTG    2237 Lys Asp Arg Ser Arg Tyr Ile Leu Glu Ile Th - #r Gly Lys Asp Gly Leu680              - #   685              - #   690  - - ATA CTG TTC CAA ACA CTC ATT GGA TTC ATC AG - #T GAA AGA AAG AAC GCT    2285 Ile Leu Phe Gln Thr Leu Ile Gly Phe Ile Se - #r Glu Arg Lys Asn Ala 695                 7 - #00                 7 - #05                 7 -#10   - - CTG CTT AAT AAG GCA ATA TCT CAG AGG GAA AT - #G AAC AAC TTG GAAAAC     2333  Leu Leu Asn Lys Ala Ile Ser Gln Arg Glu Me - #t Asn Asn Leu Glu Asn            715  - #               720  - #               725  - - AAT GGA TTT TAC AGG CTC AGT GAA TTC AAT GT - #C AGC ACG GAA TAC TAT    2381 Asn Gly Phe Tyr Arg Leu Ser Glu Phe Asn Va - #l Ser Thr Glu Tyr Tyr        730      - #           735      - #           740  - - GAG GGC AAG GTC TAT GAC TTA ACT CTT GAA GG - #A ACT CCC TAC TAC TTT    2429 Glu Gly Lys Val Tyr Asp Leu Thr Leu Glu Gl - #y Thr Pro Tyr Tyr Phe    745          - #       750          - #       755  - - GCC AAT GGC ATA TTG ACC CAT AAC TCC CTG TA - #C CCC TCA ATC ATC ATC    2477 Ala Asn Gly Ile Leu Thr His Asn Ser Leu Ty - #r Pro Ser Ile Ile Ile760              - #   765              - #   770  - - ACC CAC AAC GTC TCG CCG GAT ACG CTC AAC AG - #A GAA GGA TGC AAG GAA    2525 Thr His Asn Val Ser Pro Asp Thr Leu Asn Ar - #g Glu Gly Cys Lys Glu 775                 7 - #80                 7 - #85                 7 -#90   - - TAT GAC GTT GCC CCA CAG GTC GGC CAC CGC TT - #C TGC AAG GAC TTCCCA     2573  Tyr Asp Val Ala Pro Gln Val Gly His Arg Ph - #e Cys Lys Asp Phe Pro            795  - #               800  - #               805  - - GGA TTT ATC CCG AGC CTG CTT GGA GAC CTC CT - #A GAG GAG AGG CAG AAG    2621 Gly Phe Ile Pro Ser Leu Leu Gly Asp Leu Le - #u Glu Glu Arg Gln Lys        810      - #           815      - #           820  - - ATA AAG AAG AAG ATG AAG GCC ACG ATT GAC CC - #G ATC GAG AGG AAG CTC    2669 Ile Lys Lys Lys Met Lys Ala Thr Ile Asp Pr - #o Ile Glu Arg Lys Leu    825          - #       830          - #       835  - - CTC GAT TAC AGG CAG AGG GCC ATC AAG ATC CT - #G GCA AAC AGC ATC CTA    2717 Leu Asp Tyr Arg Gln Arg Ala Ile Lys Ile Le - #u Ala Asn Ser Ile Leu840              - #   845              - #   850  - - CCC GAG GAA TGG CTT CCA GTC CTC GAG GAA GG - #G GAG GTT CAC TTC GTC    2765 Pro Glu Glu Trp Leu Pro Val Leu Glu Glu Gl - #y Glu Val His Phe Val 855                 8 - #60                 8 - #65                 8 -#70   - - AGG ATT GGA GAG CTC ATA GAC CGG ATG ATG GA - #G GAA AAT GCT GGGAAA     2813  Arg Ile Gly Glu Leu Ile Asp Arg Met Met Gl - #u Glu Asn Ala Gly Lys            875  - #               880  - #               885  - - GTA AAG AGA GAG GGC GAG ACG GAA GTG CTT GA - #G GTC AGT GGG CTT GAA    2861 Val Lys Arg Glu Gly Glu Thr Glu Val Leu Gl - #u Val Ser Gly Leu Glu        890      - #           895      - #           900  - - GTC CCG TCC TTT AAC AGG AGA ACT AAC AAG GC - #C GAG CTC AAG AGA GTA    2909 Val Pro Ser Phe Asn Arg Arg Thr Asn Lyn Al - #a Glu Leu Lys Arg Val    905          - #       910          - #       915  - - AAG GCC CTG ATT AGG CAC GAT TAT TCT GGC AA - #G GTC TAC ACC ATC AGA    2957 Lys Ala Leu Ile Arg His Asp Tyr Ser Gly Ly - #s Val Tyr Thr Ile Arg920              - #   925              - #   930  - - CTG AAG TCG GGG AGG AGA ATA AAG ATA ACC TC - #T GGC CAC AGC CTC TTC    3005 Leu Lys Ser Gly Arg Arg Ile Lys Ile Thr Se - #r Gly His Ser Leu Phe 935                 9 - #40                 9 - #45                 9 -#50   - - TCT GTG AGA AAC GGG GAG CTC GTT GAA GTT AC - #G GGC GAT GAA CTAAAG     3053  Ser Val Arg Asn Gly Glu Leu Val Glu Val Th - #r Gly Asp Glu Leu Lys            955  - #               960  - #               965  - - CCA GGT GAC CTC GTT GCA GTC CCG CGG AGA TT - #G GAG CTT CCT GAG AGA    3101 Pro Gly Asp Leu Val Ala Val Pro Arg Arg Le - #u Glu Leu Pro Glu Arg        970      - #           975      - #           980  - - AAC CAC GTG CTG AAC CTC GTT GAA CTG CTC CT - #T GGA ACG CCA GAA GAA    3149 Asn His Val Leu Asn Leu Val Glu Leu Leu Le - #u Gly Thr Pro Glu Glu    985          - #       990          - #       995  - - GAA ACT TTG GAC ATC GTC ATG ACG ATC CCA GT - #C AAG GGT AAG AAG AAC    3197 Glu Thr Leu Asp Ile Val Met Thr Ile Pro Va - #l Lys Gly Lys Lys Asn1000             - #   1005              - #  1010  - - TTC TTT AAA GGG ATG CTC AGG ACT TTG CGC TG - #G ATT TTC GGA GAG GAA    3245 Phe Phe Lys Gly Met Leu Arg Thr Leu Arg Tr - #p Ile Phe Gly Glu Glu 1015                1020 - #                1025 - #               1030  - - AAG AGG CCC AGA ACC GCG AGA CGC TAT CTC AG - #G CAC CTT GAG GAT CTG    3293 Lys Arg Pro Arg Thr Ala Arg Arg Tyr Leu Ar - #g His Leu Glu Asp Leu            1035 - #               1040  - #              1045  - - GGC TAT GTC CGG CTT AAG AAG ATC GGC TAC GA - #A GTC CTC GAC TGG GAC    3341 Gly Tyr Val Arg Leu Lys Lys Ile Gly Tyr Gl - #u Val Leu Asp Trp Asp        1050     - #           1055      - #          1060  - - TCA CTT AAG AAC TAC AGA AGG CTC TAC GAG GC - #G CTT GTC GAG AAC GTC    3389 Ser Leu Lys Asn Tyr Arg Arg Leu Tyr Glu Al - #a Leu Val Glu Asn Val    1065         - #       1070          - #      1075  - - AGA TAC AAC GGC AAC AAG AGG GAG TAC CTC GT - #T GAA TTC AAT TCC ATC    3437 Arg Tyr Asn Gly Asn Lys Arg Glu Tyr Leu Va - #l Glu Phe Asn Ser Ile1080             - #   1085              - #  1090  - - CGG GAT GCA GTT GGC ATA ATG CCC CTA AAA GA - #G CTG AAG GAG TGG AAG    3485 Arg Asp Ala Val Gly Ile Met Pro Leu Lys Gl - #u Leu Lys Glu Trp Lys 1095                1100 - #                1105 - #               1110  - - ATC GGC ACG CTG AAC GGC TTC AGA ATG AGA AA - #G CTC ATT GAA GTG GAC    3533 Ile Gly Thr Leu Asn Gly Phe Arg Met Arg Ly - #s Leu Ile Glu Val Asp            1115 - #               1120  - #              1125  - - GAG TCG TTA GCA AAG CTC CTC GGC TAC TAC GT - #G AGC GAG GGC TAT GCA    3581 Glu Ser Leu Ala Lys Leu Leu Gly Tyr Tyr Va - #l Ser Glu Gly Tyr Ala        1130     - #           1135      - #          1140  - - AGA AAG CAG AGG AAT CCC AAA AAC GGC TGG AG - #C TAC AGC GTG AAG CTC    3629 Arg Lys Gln Arg Asn Pro Lys Asn Gly Trp Se - #r Tyr Ser Val Lys Leu    1145         - #       1150          - #      1155  - - TAC AAC GAA GAC CCT GAA GTG CTG GAC GAT AT - #G GAG AGA CTC GCC AGC    3677 Tyr Asn Glu Asp Pro Glu Val Leu Asp Asp Me - #t Glu Arg Leu Ala Ser1160             - #   1165              - #  1170  - - AGG TTT TTC GGG AAG GTG AGG CGG GGC AGG AA - #C TAC GTT GAG ATA CCG    3725 Arg Phe Phe Gly Lys Val Arg Arg Gly Arg As - #n Tyr Val Glu Ile Pro 1175                1180 - #                1185 - #               1190  - - AAG AAG ATC GGC TAC CTG CTC TTT GAG AAC AT - #G TGC GGT GTC CTA GCG    3773 Lys Lys Ile Gly Tyr Leu Leu Phe Glu Asn Me - #t Cys Gly Val Leu Ala            1195 - #               1200  - #              1205  - - GAG AAC AAG AGG ATT CCC GAG TTC GTC TTC AC - #G TCC CCG AAA GGG GTT    3821 Glu Asn Lys Arg Ile Pro Glu Phe Val Phe Th - #r Ser Pro Lys Gly Val        1210     - #           1215      - #          1220  - - CGG CTG GCC TTC CTT GAG GGG TAC TCA TCG GC - #G ATG GCG ACG TCC ACC    3869 Arg Leu Ala Phe Leu Glu Gly Tyr Ser Ser Al - #a Met Ala Thr Ser Thr    1225         - #       1230          - #      1235  - - GAA CAA GAG ACT CAG GCT CTC AAC GAA AAG CG - #A GCT TTA GCG AAC CAG    3917 Glu Gln Glu Thr Gln Ala Leu Asn Glu Lys Ar - #g Ala Leu Ala Asn Gln1240             - #   1245              - #  1250  - - CTC GTC CTC CTC TTG AAC TCG GTG GGG GTC TC - #T GCT GTA AAA CTT GGG    3965 Leu Val Leu Leu Leu Asn Ser Val Gly Val Se - #r Ala Val Lys Leu Gly 1255                1260 - #                1265 - #               1270  - - CAC GAC AGC GGC GTT TAC AGG GTC TAT ATA AA - #C GAG GAG CTC CCG TTC    4013 His Asp Ser Gly Val Tyr Arg Val Tyr Ile As - #n Glu Glu Leu Pro Phe            1275 - #               1280  - #              1285  - - GTA AAG CTG GAC AAG AAA AAG AAC GCC TAC TA - #C TCA CAC GTG ATC CCC    4061 Val Lys Leu Asp Lys Lys Lys Asn Ala Tyr Ty - #r Ser His Val Ile Pro        1290     - #           1295      - #          1300  - - AAG GAA GTC CTG AGC GAG GTC TTT GGG AAG GT - #T TTC CAG AAA AAC GTC    4109 Lys Glu Val Leu Ser Glu Val Phe Gly Lys Va - #l Phe Gln Lys Asn Val    1305         - #       1310          - #      1315  - - AGT CCT CAG ACC TTC AGG AAG ATG GTC GAG GA - #C GGA AGA CTC GAT CCC    4157 Ser Pro Gln Thr Phe Arg Lys Met Val Glu As - #p Gly Arg Leu Asp Pro1320             - #   1325              - #  1330  - - GAA AAG GCC CAG AGG CTC TCC TGG CTC ATT GA - #G GGG GAC GTA GTG CTC    4205 Glu Lys Ala Gln Arg Leu Ser Trp Leu Ile Gl - #u Gly Asp Val Val Leu 1335                1340 - #                1345 - #               1350  - - GAC CGC GTT GAG TCC GTT GAT GTG GAA GAC TA - #C GAT GGT TAT GTC TAT    4253 Asp Arg Val Glu Ser Val Asp Val Glu Asp Ty - #r Asp Gly Tyr Val Tyr            1355 - #               1360  - #              1365  - - GAC CTG AGC GTC GAG GAC AAC GAG AAC TTC CT - #C GTT GGC TTT GGG TTG    4301 Asp Leu Ser Val Glu Asp Asn Glu Asn Phe Le - #u Val Gly Phe Gly Leu        1370     - #           1375      - #          1380  - - GTC TAT GCT CAC AAC AGC TAC TAC GGT TAC TA - #C GGC TAT GCA AGG GCG    4349 Val Tyr Ala His Asn Ser Tyr Tyr Gly Tyr Ty - #r Gly Tyr Ala Arg Ala    1385         - #       1390          - #      1395  - - CGC TGG TAC TGC AAG GAG TGT GCA GAG AGC GT - #A ACG GCC TGG GGA AGG    4397 Arg Trp Tyr Cys Lys Glu Cys Ala Glu Ser Va - #l Thr Ala Trp Gly Arg1400             - #   1405              - #  1410  - - GAG TAC ATA ACG ATG ACC ATC AAG GAG ATA GA - #G GAA AAG TAC GGC TTT    4445 Glu Tyr Ile Thr Met Thr Ile Lys Glu Ile Gl - #u Glu Lys Tyr Gly Phe 1415                1420 - #                1425 - #               1430  - - AAG GTA ATC TAC AGC GAC ACC GAC GGA TTT TT - #T GCC ACA ATA CCT GGA    4493 Lys Val Ile Tyr Ser Asp Thr Asp Gly Phe Ph - #e Ala Thr Ile Pro Gly            1435 - #               1440  - #              1445  - - GCC GAT GCT GAA ACC GTC AAA AAG AAG GCT AT - #G GAG TTC CTC AAC TAT    4541 Ala Asp Ala Glu Thr Val Lys Lys Lys Ala Me - #t Glu Phe Leu Asn Tyr        1450     - #           1455      - #          1460  - - ATC AAC GCC AAA CTT CCG GGC GCG CTT GAG CT - #C GAG TAC GAG GGC TTC    4589 Ile Asn Ala Lys Leu Pro Gly Ala Leu Glu Le - #u Glu Tyr Glu Gly Phe    1465         - #       1470          - #      1475  - - TAC AAA CGC GGC TTC TTC GTC ACG AAG AAG AA - #G TAT GCG GTG ATA GAC    4637 Tyr Lys Arg Gly Phe Phe Val Thr Lys Lys Ly - #s Tyr Ala Val Ile Asp1480             - #   1485              - #  1490  - - GAG GAA GGC AAG ATA ACA ACG CGC GGA CTT GA - #G ATT GTG AGG CGT GAC    4685 Glu Glu Gly Lys Ile Thr Thr Arg Gly Leu Gl - #u Ile Val Arg Arg Asp 1495                1500 - #                1505 - #               1510  - - TGG AGC GAG ATA GCG AAA GAG ACG CAG GCG AG - #G GTT CTT GAA GCT TTG    4733 Trp Ser Glu Ile Ala Lys Glu Thr Gln Ala Ar - #g Val Leu Glu Ala Leu            1515 - #               1520  - #              1525  - - CTA AAG GAC GGT GAC GTC GAG AAG GCC GTG AG - #G ATA GTC AAA GAA GTT    4781 Leu Lys Asp Gly Asp Val Glu Lys Ala Val Ar - #g Ile Val Lys Glu Val        1530     - #           1535      - #          1540  - - ACC GAA AAG CTG AGC AAG TAC GAG GTT CCG CC - #G GAG AAG CTG GTG ATC    4829 Thr Glu Lys Leu Ser Lys Tyr Glu Val Pro Pr - #o Glu Lys Leu Val Ile    1545         - #       1550          - #      1555  - - CAC GAG CAG ATA ACG AGG GAT TTA AAG GAC TA - #C AAG GCA ACC GGT CCC    4877 His Glu Gln Ile Thr Arg Asp Leu Lys Asp Ty - #r Lys Ala Thr Gly Pro1560             - #   1565              - #  1570  - - CAC GTT GCC GTT GCC AAG AGG TTG GCC GCG AG - #A GGA GTC AAA ATA CGC    4925 His Val Ala Val Ala Lys Arg Leu Ala Ala Ar - #g Gly Val Lys Ile Art 1575                1580 - #                1585 - #               1590  - - CCT GGA ACG GTG ATA AGC TAC ATC GTG CTC AA - #G GGC TCT GGG AGG ATA    4973 Pro Gly Thr Val Ile Ser Tyr Ile Val Leu Ly - #s Gly Ser Gly Arg Ile            1595 - #               1600  - #              1605  - - GGC GAC AGG GCG ATA CCG TTC GAC GAG TTC GA - #C CCG ACG AAG CAC AAG    5021 Gly Asp Arg Ala Ile Pro Phe Asp Glu Phe As - #p Pro Thr Lys His Lys        1610     - #           1615      - #          1620  - - TAC GAC GCC GAG TAC TAC ATT GAG AAC CAG GT - #T CTC CCA GCC GTT GAG    5069 Tyr Asp Ala Glu Tyr Tyr Ile Glu Asn Gln Va - #l Leu Pro Ala Val Glu    1625         - #       1630          - #      1635  - - AGA ATT CTG AGA GCC TTC GGT TAC CGC AAG GA - #A GAC CTG CGC TAC CAG    5117 Arg Ile Leu Arg Ala Phe Gly Tyr Arg Lys Gl - #u Asp Leu Arg Tyr Gln1640             - #   1645              - #  1650  - - AAG ACG AGA CAG GTT GGT TTG AGT GCT TGG CT - #G AAG CCG AAG GGA ACT    5165 Lys Thr Arg Gln Val Gly Leu Ser Ala Trp Le - #u Lys Pro Lys Gly Thr 1655                1660 - #                1665 - #               1670  - - TGACCTTTCC ATTTGTTTTC CAGCGGATAA CCCTTTAACT TCCCTTTCAA AA -#ACTCCCTT   5225   - - TAGGGAAAGA CCATGAAGAT AGAAATCCGG CGGCGCCCGG TTAAATACGC TA -#GGATAGAA   5285   - - GTGAAGCCAG ACGGCAGGGT AGTCGTCACT GCCCCGAGGG TTCAACGTTG AG - #AAGTT5342  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH:774 amino ac - #ids      (B) TYPE: amino acid      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2:  - - Met Ile Leu Asp Thr Asp Tyr Ile Thr Glu As - #p Gly Lys Pro Val Ile             5 - #                  - #10                  - #15  - - Arg Ile Phe Lys Lys Glu Asn Gly Glu Phe Ly - #s Ile Glu Tyr Asp Arg         20     - #             25     - #             30  - - Thr Phe Glu Pro Tyr Phe Tyr Ala Leu Leu Ly - #s Asp Asp Ser Ala Ile     35         - #         40         - #         45  - - Glu Glu Val Lys Lys Ile Thr Ala Glu Arg Hi - #s Gly Thr Val Val Thr 50             - #     55             - #     60  - - Val Lys Arg Val Glu Lys Val Gln Lys Lys Ph - #e Leu Gly Arg Pro Val  65                 - # 70                 - # 75                 - # 80  - - Glu Val Trp Lys Leu Tyr Phe Thr His Pro Gl - #n Asp Val Pro Ala Ile             85 - #                 90 - #                 95  - - Arg Asp Lys Ile Arg Glu His Gly Ala Val Il - #e Asp Ile Tyr Glu Tyr        100      - #           105      - #           110  - - Asp Ile Pro Phe Ala Lys Arg Tyr Leu Ile As - #p Lys Gly Leu Val Pro    115          - #       120          - #       125  - - Met Glu Gly Asp Glu Glu Leu Lys Met Leu Al - #a Phe Asp Ile Glu Thr130              - #   135              - #   140  - - Leu Tyr His Glu Gly Glu Glu Phe Ala Glu Gl - #y Pro Ile Leu Met Ile 145                 1 - #50                 1 - #55                 1 -#60   - - Ser Tyr Ala Asp Glu Glu Gly Ala Arg Val Il - #e Thr Trp Lys AsnVal             165  - #               170  - #               175  - - Asp Leu Pro Tyr Val Asp Val Val Ser Thr Gl - #u Arg Glu Met Ile Lys        180      - #           185      - #           190  - - Arg Phe Leu Arg Val Val Lys Glu Lys Asp Pr - #o Asp Val Leu Ile Thr    195          - #       200          - #       205  - - Tyr Asn Gly Asp Asn Phe Asp Phe Ala Tyr Le - #u Lys Lys Arg Cys Glu210              - #   215              - #   220  - - Lys Leu Gly Ile Asn Phe Ala Leu Gly Arg As - #p Gly Ser Glu Pro Lys 225                 2 - #30                 2 - #35                 2 -#40   - - Ile Gln Arg Met Gly Asp Arg Phe Ala Val Gl - #u Val Lys Gly ArgIle             245  - #               250  - #               255  - - His Phe Asp Leu Tyr Pro Val Ile Arg Arg Th - #r Ile Asn Leu Pro Thr        260      - #           265      - #           270  - - Tyr Thr Leu Glu Ala Val Tyr Glu Ala Val Ph - #e Gly Gln Pro Lys Glu    275          - #       280          - #       285  - - Lys Val Tyr Ala Glu Glu Ile Thr Pro Ala Tr - #p Glu Thr Gly Glu Asn290              - #   295              - #   300  - - Leu Glu Arg Val Ala Arg Tyr Ser Met Glu As - #p Ala Lys Val Thr Tyr 305                 3 - #10                 3 - #15                 3 -#20   - - Glu Leu Gly Lys Glu Phe Leu Pro Met Glu Al - #a Gln Leu Ser ArgLeu             325  - #               330  - #               335  - - Ile Gly Gln Ser Leu Trp Asp Val Ser Arg Se - #r Ser Thr Gly Asn Leu        340      - #           345      - #           350  - - Val Glu Trp Phe Leu Leu Arg Lys Ala Tyr Gl - #u Arg Asn Glu Leu Ala    355          - #       360          - #       365  - - Pro Asn Lys Pro Asp Glu Lys Glu Leu Ala Ar - #g Arg Arg Gln Ser Tyr370              - #   375              - #   380  - - Glu Gly Gly Tyr Val Lys Glu Pro Glu Arg Gl - #y Leu Trp Glu Asn Ile 385                 3 - #90                 3 - #95                 4 -#00   - - Val Tyr Leu Asp Phe Arg Ser Leu Tyr Pro Se - #r Ile Ile Ile ThrHis             405  - #               410  - #               415  - - Asn Val Ser Pro Asp Thr Leu Asn Arg Glu Gl - #y Cys Lys Glu Tyr Asp        420      - #           425      - #           430  - - Val Ala Pro Gln Val Gly His Arg Phe Cys Ly - #s Asp Phe Pro Gly Phe    435          - #       440          - #       445  - - Ile Pro Ser Leu Leu Gly Asp Leu Leu Glu Gl - #u Arg Gln Lys Ile Lys450              - #   455              - #   460  - - Lys Lys Met Lys Ala Thr Ile Asp Pro Ile Gl - #u Arg Lys Leu Leu Asp 465                 4 - #70                 4 - #75                 4 -#80   - - Tyr Arg Gln Arg Ala Ile Lys Ile Leu Ala As - #n Ser Tyr Tyr GlyTyr             485  - #               490  - #               495  - - Tyr Gly Tyr Ala Arg Ala Arg Trp Tyr Cys Ly - #s Glu Cys Ala Glu Ser        500      - #           505      - #           510  - - Val Thr Ala Trp Gly Arg Glu Tyr Ile Thr Me - #t Thr Ile Lys Glu Ile    515          - #       520          - #       525  - - Glu Glu Lys Tyr Gly Phe Lys Val Ile Tyr Se - #r Asp Thr Asp Gly Phe530              - #   535              - #   540  - - Phe Ala Thr Ile Pro Gly Ala Asp Ala Glu Th - #r Val Lys Lys Lys Ala 545                 5 - #50                 5 - #55                 5 -#60   - - Met Glu Phe Leu Asn Tyr Ile Asn Ala Lys Le - #u Pro Gly Ala LeuGlu             565  - #               570  - #               575  - - Leu Glu Tyr Glu Gly Phe Tyr Lys Arg Gly Ph - #e Phe Val Thr Lys Lys        580      - #           585      - #           590  - - Lys Tyr Ala Val Ile Asp Glu Glu Gly Lys Il - #e Thr Thr Arg Gly Leu    595          - #       600          - #       605  - - Glu Ile Val Arg Arg Asp Trp Ser Glu Ile Al - #a Lys Glu Thr Gln Ala610              - #   615              - #   620  - - Arg Val Leu Glu Ala Leu Leu Lys Asp Gly As - #p Val Glu Lys Ala Val 625                 6 - #30                 6 - #35                 6 -#40   - - Arg Ile Val Lys Glu Val Thr Glu Lys Leu Se - #r Lys Tyr Glu ValPro             645  - #               650  - #               655  - - Pro Glu Lys Leu Val Ile His Glu Gln Ile Th - #r Arg Asp Leu Lys Asp        660      - #           665      - #           670  - - Tyr Lys Ala Thr Gly Pro His Val Ala Val Al - #a Lys Arg Leu Ala Ala    675          - #       680          - #       685  - - Arg Gly Val Lys Ile Arg Pro Gly Thr Val Il - #e Ser Tyr Ile Val Leu690              - #   695              - #   700  - - Lys Gly Ser Gly Arg Ile Gly Asp Arg Ala Il - #e Pro Phe Asp Glu Phe 705                 7 - #10                 7 - #15                 7 -#20   - - Asp Pro Thr Lys His Lys Tyr Asp Ala Glu Ty - #r Tyr Ile Glu AsnGln             725  - #               730  - #               735  - - Val Leu Pro Ala Val Glu Arg Ile Leu Arg Al - #a Phe Gly Tyr Arg Lys        740      - #           745      - #           750  - - Glu Asp Leu Arg Tyr Gln Lys Thr Arg Gln Va - #l Gly Leu Ser Ala Trp    755          - #       760          - #       765  - - Leu Lys Pro Lys Gly Thr770  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 2325 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS:  doub - #le      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: genomic DNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3:  - - ATGATCCTCG ACACTGACTA CATAACCGAG GATGGAAAGC CTGTCATAAG AA -#TTTTCAAG     60   - - AAGGAAAACG GCGAGTTTAA GATTGAGTAC GACCGGACTT TTGAACCCTA CT -#TCTACGCC    120   - - CTCCTGAAGG ACGATTCTGC CATTGAGGAA GTCAAGAAGA TAACCGCCGA GA -#GGCACGGG    180   - - ACGGTTGTAA CGGTTAAGCG GGTTGAAAAG GTTCAGAAGA AGTTCCTCGG GA -#GACCAGTT    240   - - GAGGTCTGGA AACTCTACTT TACTCATCCG CAGGACGTCC CAGCGATAAG GG -#ACAAGATA    300   - - CGAGAGCATG GAGCAGTTAT TGACATCTAC GAGTACGACA TACCCTTCGC CA -#AGCGCTAC    360   - - CTCATAGACA AGGGATTAGT GCCAATGGAA GGCGACGAGG AGCTGAAAAT GC -#TCGCCTTC    420   - - GACATTGAAA CTCTCTACCA TGAGGGCGAG GAGTTCGCCG AGGGGCCAAT CC -#TTATGATA    480   - - AGCTACGCCG ACGAGGAAGG GGCCAGGGTG ATAACTTGGA AGAACGTGGA TC -#TCCCCTAC    540   - - GTTGACGTCG TCTCGACGGA GAGGGAGATG ATAAAGCGCT TCCTCCGTGT TG -#TGAAGGAG    600   - - AAAGACCCGG ACGTTCTCAT AACCTACAAC GGCGACAACT TCGACTTCGC CT -#ATCTGAAA    660   - - AAGCGCTGTG AAAAGCTCGG AATAAACTTC GCCCTCGGAA GGGATGGAAG CG -#AGCCGAAG    720   - - ATTCAGAGGA TGGGCGACAG GTTTGCCGTC GAAGTGAAGG GACGGATACA CT -#TCGATCTC    780   - - TATCCTGTGA TAAGACGGAC GATAAACCTG CCCACATACA CGCTTGAGGC CG -#TTTATGAA    840   - - GCCGTCTTCG GTCAGCCGAA GGAGAAGGTT TACGCTGAGG AAATAACACC AG -#CCTGGGAA    900   - - ACCGGCGAGA ACCTTGAGAG AGTCGCCCGC TACTCGATGG AAGATGCGAA GG -#TCACATAC    960   - - GAGCTTGGGA AGGAGTTCCT TCCGATGGAG GCCCAGCTTT CTCGCTTAAT CG -#GCCAGTCC   1020   - - CTCTGGGACG TCTCCCGCTC CAGCACTGGC AACCTCGTTG AGTGGTTCCT CC -#TCAGGAAG   1080   - - GCCTATGAGA GGAATGAGCT GGCCCCGAAC AAGCCCGATG AAAAGGAGCT GG -#CCAGAAGA   1140   - - CGGCAGAGCT ATGAAGGAGG CTATGTAAAA GAGCCCGAGA GAGGGTTGTG GG -#AGAACATA   1200   - - GTGTACCTAG ATTTTAGATC CCTGTACCCC TCAATCATCA TCACCCACAA CG -#TCTCGCCG   1260   - - GATACGCTCA ACAGAGAAGG ATGCAAGGAA TATGACGTTG CCCCACAGGT CG -#GCCACCGC   1320   - - TTCTGCAAGG ACTTCCCAGG ATTTATCCCG AGCCTGCTTG GAGACCTCCT AG -#AGGAGAGG   1380   - - CAGAAGATAA AGAAGAAGAT GAAGGCCACG ATTGACCCGA TCGAGAGGAA GC -#TCCTCGAT   1440   - - TACAGGCAGA GGGCCATCAA GATCCTGGCA AACAGCTACT ACGGTTACTA CG -#GCTATGCA   1500   - - AGGGCGCGCT GGTACTGCAA GGAGTGTGCA GAGAGCGTAA CGGCCTGGGG AA -#GGGAGTAC   1560   - - ATAACGATGA CCATCAAGGA GATAGAGGAA AAGTACGGCT TTAAGGTAAT CT -#ACAGCGAC   1620   - - ACCGACGGAT TTTTTGCCAC AATACCTGGA GCCGATGCTG AAACCGTCAA AA -#AGAAGGCT   1680   - - ATGGAGTTCC TCAACTATAT CAACGCCAAA CTTCCGGGCG CGCTTGAGCT CG -#AGTACGAG   1740   - - GGCTTCTACA AACGCGGCTT CTTCGTCACG AAGAAGAAGT ATGCGGTGAT AG -#ACGAGGAA   1800   - - GGCAAGATAA CAACGCGCGG ACTTGAGATT GTGAGGCGTG ACTGGAGCGA GA -#TAGCGAAA   1860   - - GAGACGCAGG CGAGGGTTCT TGAAGCTTTG CTAAAGGACG GTGACGTCGA GA -#AGGCCGTG   1920   - - AGGATAGTCA AAGAAGTTAC CGAAAAGCTG AGCAAGTACG AGGTTCCGCC GG -#AGAAGCTG   1980   - - GTGATCCACG AGCAGATAAC GAGGGATTTA AAGGACTACA AGGCAACCGG TC -#CCCACGTT   2040   - - GCCGTTGCCA AGAGGTTGGC CGCGAGAGGA GTCAAAATAC GCCCTGGAAC GG -#TGATAAGC   2100   - - TACATCGTGC TCAAGGGCTC TGGGAGGATA GGCGACAGGG CGATACCGTT CG -#ACGAGTTC   2160   - - GACCCGACGA AGCACAAGTA CGACGCCGAG TACTACATTG AGAACCAGGT TC -#TCCCAGCC   2220   - - GTTGAGAGAA TTCTGAGAGC CTTCGGTTAC CGCAAGGAAG ACCTGCGCTA CC -#AGAAGACG   2280   - - AGACAGGTTG GTTTGAGTGC TTGGCTGAAG CCGAAGGGAA CTTGA   - #    2325  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 24 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4:  - - CTTTTGCTCA GATCTTCTTT CCTG          - #                  - #   24  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:5:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 24 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:5:  - - CAGGAAAGAA GATCTGAGCA AAAG          - #                  - #   24  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6:  - - CTGAAAATGC TCGCCTTCGC GATTGCAACT CTCTAC      - #                  -#       36  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 34 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7:  - - CTGAAAATGC TCGCCTTCGC GATTGAAACT CTCT       - #                  -#        34   - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:8:   - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:       (A) LENGTH: 30 base - #pairs       (B) TYPE: nucleic acid       (C) STRANDEDNESS: single       (D) TOPOLOGY: linear   - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA   - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:8:   - - GCCCTCGTGG TAGAGAGTTG CAATGTCGAA         - #                  - #    30  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:9:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 32 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:9:  - - CGGACGTACT GATAACGTAC GACGGTGACA AC       - #                  - #   32  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:10:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 32 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:10:  - - CGGACGTACT GATAACGTAC GACGGTGACA AC       - #                  - #   32  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:11:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 35 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:11:  - - TGGCTAGCCA AGGAACCACC AGTTGATTAG CAGAG       - #                  -#       35  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:12:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 35 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:12:  - - ATAAGAGGTC CCAAGACTTA GTACCTGAAG GGTGA       - #                  -#       35  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:13:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 35 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:13:  - - AAAAAGTACT CACCAGTCAC AGAAAAGCAT CTTAC       - #                  -#       35  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:14:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 35 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:14:  - - AAAAAGTACT CAACCAAGTC ATTCCTGAGA ATAGT       - #                  -#       35  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:15:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 24 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:15:  - - CGCCAGGGTT TTCCCAGTCA CGAC          - #                  - #   24  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:16:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 24 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:16:  - - CTTTTGCTCA GATCTTCTTT CCTG          - #                  - #   24  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:17:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:17:  - - AGCTGAAAAT GCTAGCCTTC GACAATGAAA CTCTCT      - #                  -#       36  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:18:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:18:  - - AGCTGAAAAT GCTAGCCTTC GACGAAGAAA CTCTCT      - #                  -#       36  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:19:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 33 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:19:  - - GAAAATGCTC GCCTTTGATC AAGAAACTCT CTA       - #                  - #   33  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:20:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:20:  - - AGCTGAAAAT GCTAGCCTTC GACGATGAAA CTCTCT      - #                  -#       36  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:21:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 30 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:21:  - - CGCCTTCGAC ATTGAAGTAC TCTACCATGA         - #                  - #   30  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:22:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:22:  - - AGCTGAAAAT GCTAGCCTTC GACAGAGAAA CTCTCT      - #                  -#       36  - -  - - (2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:23:  - -      (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:      (A) LENGTH: 36 base - #pairs      (B) TYPE: nucleic acid      (C) STRANDEDNESS: single      (D) TOPOLOGY: linear  - -     (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA  - -     (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:23:  - - AGCTGAAAAT GCTAGCCTTC GACAAAGAAA CTCTCT      - #                  -#       36__________________________________________________________________________
Patent CitationsCited PatentFiling datePublication dateApplicantTitleUS5489523 *Oct 26, 1992Feb 6, 1996StratageneExonuclease-deficient thermostable Pyrococcus furiosus DNA polymerase IUS5512462 *Feb 25, 1994Apr 30, 1996Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.For amplification of nucleic acid sequences longer than ten kilobasesUS5545552 *Apr 19, 1995Aug 13, 1996StratagenePurified thermostable pyrococcus furiosus DNA polymerase IUS5556772 *Feb 16, 1994Sep 17, 1996StratagenePolymerase compositions and uses thereofUS5602011 *Jan 18, 1995Feb 11, 1997Pharmacia Biotech Inc.Purified Thermococcus barossii DNA polymerase* Cited by examinerNon-Patent CitationsReference1 *Kitabayashi et al., FASEB J. 10(6), A1245 (Abstract), 1996.2 *Southworth et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 5281 5285, 1996.3Southworth et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 5281-5285, 1996.4 *Takagi et al., App. Environ. Microbiol. 63(11), 4504 4510 1997.5Takagi et al., App. Environ. Microbiol. 63(11), 4504-4510 1997.* Cited by examinerReferenced byCiting PatentFiling datePublication dateApplicantTitleUS6436677Mar 2, 2000Aug 20, 2002Promega CorporationCombining thermoactinomyces vulgaris dna polymerase, sample containing rna, primer, buffer comprising magnesium ions and substantially free of manganese ions; reacting mixture such that polymerase reverse transcribes rna to cdnaUS6632645Mar 2, 2000Oct 14, 2003Promega CorporationOf given amino acid sequence; use in sequencing, reverse transcription, and amplification reactionsUS7049101Sep 6, 2000May 23, 2006Diversa CorporationEnzymes having high temperature polymerase activity and methods of use thereofUS7056703Sep 6, 2001Jun 6, 2006Diversa CorporationNucleotide sequences coding enzymetic polypeptide for use as tool in amplification of nucleotide sequencesUS7094539Jun 24, 2002Aug 22, 2006Promega CorporationBacillus stearothermophilus reverse transcription compositions and kitsUS7214522May 23, 2003May 8, 2007Promega CorporationThermophilic DNA polymerases from Thermoactinomyces vulgarisUS7306929Apr 1, 2004Dec 11, 2007Promega CorporationMethod for controlled release of enzymatic reaction componentsUS7504220Jun 27, 2006Mar 17, 2009Promega CorporationMethod of reverse transcriptionUS7521178Apr 21, 1999Apr 21, 2009Takara Bio Inc.Method for synthesizing DNAUS7704713 *May 12, 2005Apr 27, 2010Takara Bio Inc.Polypeptides having DNA polymerase activityUS7781198Dec 21, 2001Aug 24, 2010Verenium CorporationNucleotide sequences coding enzymatic polypeptide for use as amplification tool in genetic engineeringUS8048987Feb 18, 2010Nov 1, 2011Takara Bio Inc.Polypeptides having DNA polymerase activityUS8124391 *Oct 5, 2001Feb 28, 2012Qiagen GmbhHeat resistant proteolytic enzymes for use as diagnostic and DNA amplification toolUS8148126Jul 2, 2010Apr 3, 2012Verenium CorporationPolymeraseUS8344105Sep 22, 2011Jan 1, 2013Takara Bio Inc.Polypeptides having DNA polymerase activityUS8367328Oct 15, 2008Feb 5, 2013Takara Bio Inc.Method for synthesizing DNAUS8637288Aug 8, 2002Jan 28, 2014Qiagen, GmbhThermostable chimeric nucleic acid polymerases and uses thereofUS8921043May 10, 2012Dec 30, 2014New England Biolabs, Inc.DNA polymerase variants with reduced exonuclease activity and uses thereofUS8921044Apr 8, 2014Dec 30, 2014New England Biolabs, Inc.DNA polymerase variants with reduced exonuclease activity and uses thereofUS20110313138 *Feb 25, 2010Dec 22, 2011Ucb Pharma, S.A.Method for Producing ProteinsEP2292766A2May 12, 2005Mar 9, 2011Takara Bio, Inc.Polypeptides having DNA polymerase activityEP2292767A2May 12, 2005Mar 9, 2011Takara Bio, Inc.Polypepdides having DNA polymerase activityWO2012154934A1May 10, 2012Nov 15, 2012New England Biolabs, Inc.Dna polymerase variants with reduced exonuclease activity and uses thereof* Cited by examinerClassifications U.S. Classification435/91.2, 435/194International ClassificationC12Q1/68, C12N9/12, C12N15/54Cooperative ClassificationC12Q1/686, C12N9/1252, C12Q1/6848European ClassificationC12Q1/68D2A, C12N9/12J7, C12Q1/68D4Legal EventsDateCodeEventDescriptionJun 1, 2011FPAYFee paymentYear of fee payment: 12Jun 4, 2007FPAYFee paymentYear of fee payment: 8Jun 3, 2003FPAYFee paymentYear of fee payment: 4Jul 29, 1997ASAssignmentOwner name: TOYO BOSEKI KABUSHIKI KAISHA, JAPANFree format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:KOMATSUBARA, HIDEYUKI;KITABAYASHI, MASAO;KAMIURA, HIDEKI;AND OTHERS;REEL/FRAME:008777/0588Effective date: 19970715RotateOriginal ImageGoogle Home - Sitemap - USPTO Bulk Downloads - Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - About Google Patents - Send FeedbackData provided by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services