Patents Assigned to Trustees of Amherst College
  • Patent number: 6498036
    Abstract: The invention provides in one embodiment a composition which is a linear DNA molecule having a desired replacement sequence, and second and third sequences substantially homologous to non-identical portions of the gene and having proximal and distal ends, the proximal ends flanking the desired replacement sequence and the distal ends having a terminating nucleotide analog at each end of the molecule. Another embodiment of the invention provides methods, by blocking the 3′ ends of transforming DNA with 2′3′ dideoxynucleotides, to reduce the frequency of end-mediated DNA insertion. These methods introduce only one copy of the selectable gene at the target locus to achieve a precise gene disruption, reducing or eliminating undesirable and multiple insertions that occur both non-homologously and at the targeted locus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 31, 2001
    Date of Patent: December 24, 2002
    Assignee: Trustees of Amherst College
    Inventor: David I. Ratner
  • Patent number: 6204062
    Abstract: The invention provides in one embodiment a composition which is a linear DNA molecule having a desired replacement sequence, and second and third sequences substantially homologous to non-identical portions of the gene and having proximal and distal ends, the proximal ends flanking the desired replacement sequence and the distal ends having a terminating nucleotide analog at each end of the molecule. Another embodiment of the invention provides methods, by blocking the 3′ ends of transforming DNA with 2′3′ dideoxynucleotides, to reduce the frequency of end-mediated DNA insertion. These methods introduce only one copy of the selectable gene at the target locus to achieve a precise gene disruption, reducing or eliminating undesirable and multiple insertions that occur both non-homologously and at the targeted locus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 10, 1999
    Date of Patent: March 20, 2001
    Assignee: Trustees of Amherst College
    Inventor: David I. Ratner