AbstractThe genetic encoding of synthetic or “non-natural” amino acids promises to diversify the functions and structures of proteins. We applied rapid codon-reassignment for creating Escherichia coli strains unable to terminate translation at the UAG “stop” triplet, but efficiently decoding it as various tyrosine and lysine derivatives. This complete change in the UAG meaning enabled protein synthesis with these non-natural molecules at multiple defined sites, in addition to the 20 canonical amino acids. UAG was also redefined in the E. coli BL21 strain, suitable for the large-scale production of recombinant proteins, and its cell extract served the cell-free synthesis of an epigenetic protein, histone H4, fully acetylated at four specific...
Although chemists can synthesize virtually any small organic molecule, our ability to rationally man...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...
AbstractThe genetic encoding of synthetic or “non-natural” amino acids promises to diversify the fun...
A unique transfer RNA (tRNA)/aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase pair has been gen-erated that expands the num...
At earlier stages in the evolution of the universal genetic code, fewer than 20 amino acids were con...
At earlier stages in the evolution of the universal genetic code, fewer than 20 amino acids were con...
The expansion of the genetic code is gradually becoming a core discipline in Synthetic Biology. It o...
The genetic code can be manipulated to reassign codons for the incorporation of non-standard amino a...
The genetic code of most organisms was evolved to encode 20 amino acids. Although the ability to enc...
One of the major challenges in contemporary synthetic biology is to find a route to engineer synthet...
The design and synthesis of entire genomes is a powerful approach that allows the study of biologica...
The genetic code of most organisms was evolved to encode 20 amino acids. Although the ability to enc...
The essential feature of the genetic code is the strict one-to-one correspondence between codons and...
The essential feature of the genetic code is the strict one-to-one correspondence between codons and...
Although chemists can synthesize virtually any small organic molecule, our ability to rationally man...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...
AbstractThe genetic encoding of synthetic or “non-natural” amino acids promises to diversify the fun...
A unique transfer RNA (tRNA)/aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase pair has been gen-erated that expands the num...
At earlier stages in the evolution of the universal genetic code, fewer than 20 amino acids were con...
At earlier stages in the evolution of the universal genetic code, fewer than 20 amino acids were con...
The expansion of the genetic code is gradually becoming a core discipline in Synthetic Biology. It o...
The genetic code can be manipulated to reassign codons for the incorporation of non-standard amino a...
The genetic code of most organisms was evolved to encode 20 amino acids. Although the ability to enc...
One of the major challenges in contemporary synthetic biology is to find a route to engineer synthet...
The design and synthesis of entire genomes is a powerful approach that allows the study of biologica...
The genetic code of most organisms was evolved to encode 20 amino acids. Although the ability to enc...
The essential feature of the genetic code is the strict one-to-one correspondence between codons and...
The essential feature of the genetic code is the strict one-to-one correspondence between codons and...
Although chemists can synthesize virtually any small organic molecule, our ability to rationally man...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...
The genetic code of cells is near‐universally triplet, and since many ribosomal mutations are lethal...