generated by
random mutagenesis sample sequence space. The amino acid substituted into a given position is shown. Each dot or set of connected dots is one member of the library. Error-prone PCR randomly mutates some residues to other amino acids. Alanine scanning replaces each residue of the protein with alanine, one-by-one. Site saturation substitutes each of the 20 possible amino acids (or some subset of them) at a single position, one-by-one. Early approaches to mutagenesis relied on methods which produced entirely random mutations. In such methods, cells or organisms are exposed to
mutagens such as UV radiation or mutagenic chemicals, and mutants with desired characteristics are then selected.
Hermann Muller discovered in 1927 that
X-rays can cause genetic mutations in
fruit flies, and went on to use the mutants he created for his studies in
genetics. For
Escherichia coli, mutants may be selected first by exposure to UV radiation, then plated onto an agar medium. The colonies formed are then
replica-plated, one in a
rich medium, another in a minimal medium, and mutants that have specific nutritional requirements can then be identified by their inability to grow in the minimal medium. Similar procedures may be repeated with other types of cells and with different media for selection. A number of methods for generating random mutations in specific
proteins were later developed to
screen for mutants with interesting or improved properties. These methods may involve the use of doped nucleotides in
oligonucleotide synthesis, or conducting a
PCR reaction in conditions that enhance misincorporation of nucleotides (error-prone PCR), for example by reducing the fidelity of replication or using nucleotide analogues. A variation of this method for integrating non-biased mutations in a gene is
sequence saturation mutagenesis. PCR products which contain mutation(s) are then
cloned into an
expression vector and the mutant proteins produced can then be characterised. In animal studies,
alkylating agents such as
N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) have been used to generate mutant mice.
Ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) is also often used to generate animal, plant, and virus mutants. In a
European Union law (as 2001/18 directive), this kind of mutagenesis may be used to produce
GMOs but the products are exempted from regulation: no labeling, no evaluation. ==Site-directed mutagenesis==