Literature DB >> 17506635

Chemical evolution as a tool for molecular discovery.

S Jarrett Wrenn1, Pehr B Harbury.   

Abstract

In modern academic and industrial laboratories, evolutionary strategies are used routinely to identify biopolymers with novel activities. Large libraries of nucleic acids (approximately 10(15)) or peptides and proteins (approximately 10(13)) can be subjected to multiple rounds of selective pressure, amplification, and diversification, yielding individual sequences with desirable properties. Although the evolutionary approach is a powerful search tool, the chemical nature of biopolymers is not suited for all purposes. Application of evolutionary strategies to libraries of arbitrary chemical composition would overcome this problem, and radically change traditional small-molecule discovery. The chemical make-up of in vitro evolution libraries has necessarily been limited, because library synthesis relies on enzymes. A great deal of current research focuses on expanding the chemical repertoire of in vitro evolution by (a) broadening enzyme substrate specificities to include unnatural building blocks, or (b) developing methods to translate DNA sequences into multistep organic syntheses. We discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the approaches, review the successes, and consider the future of chemical evolution as a tool.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17506635     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.biochem.76.062205.122741

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Biochem        ISSN: 0066-4154            Impact factor:   23.643


  15 in total

Review 1.  Synthetic receptors with antibody-like binding affinities.

Authors:  Thomas Kodadek
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2010-07-30       Impact factor: 8.822

2.  Templating effect in DNA proximity ligation enables use of non-bioorthogonal chemistry in biological fluids.

Authors:  Nicholas G Spiropulos; Jennifer M Heemstra
Journal:  Artif DNA PNA XNA       Date:  2012-07-01

Review 3.  Chemistry of nucleic acids: impacts in multiple fields.

Authors:  Omid Khakshoor; Eric T Kool
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2011-04-11       Impact factor: 6.222

4.  DNA-encoded drug libraries come of age.

Authors:  Asher Mullard
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2016-05-06       Impact factor: 54.908

5.  Toward a general approach for RNA-templated hierarchical assembly of split-proteins.

Authors:  Jennifer L Furman; Ahmed H Badran; Oluyomi Ajulo; Jason R Porter; Cliff I Stains; David J Segal; Indraneel Ghosh
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2010-08-25       Impact factor: 15.419

Review 6.  DNA as a versatile chemical component for catalysis, encoding, and stereocontrol.

Authors:  Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2010-09-24       Impact factor: 15.336

7.  Selection of bead-displayed, PNA-encoded chemicals.

Authors:  Natalie R Gassman; J Patrick Nelli; Samrat Dutta; Adam Kuhn; Keith Bonin; Zbigniew Pianowski; Nicolas Winssinger; Martin Guthold; Jed C Macosko
Journal:  J Mol Recognit       Date:  2010 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.137

8.  Directed evolution: overcoming biology's limitations.

Authors:  Daniel H Appella
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 15.040

9.  Reactivity-dependent PCR: direct, solution-phase in vitro selection for bond formation.

Authors:  David J Gorin; Adam S Kamlet; David R Liu
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2009-07-08       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  CyDNA: synthesis and replication of highly Cy-dye substituted DNA by an evolved polymerase.

Authors:  Nicola Ramsay; Ann-Sofie Jemth; Anthony Brown; Neal Crampton; Paul Dear; Philipp Holliger
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2010-04-14       Impact factor: 15.419

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