| Literature DB >> 20428057 |
Jörn Glökler1, Tatjana Schütze, Zoltán Konthur.
Abstract
Automation in combination with high throughput screening methods has revolutionised molecular biology in the last two decades. Today, many combinatorial libraries as well as several systems for automation are available. Depending on scope, budget and time, a different combination of library and experimental handling might be most effective. In this review we will discuss several concepts of combinatorial libraries and provide information as what to expect from these depending on the given context.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20428057 PMCID: PMC6257267 DOI: 10.3390/molecules15042478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Genotype and phenotype in phage display and SELEX. (a) Schematic drawing of a filamentous phage particle. Encoding segment of single-stranded DNA genome and displayed antibody fragment are coloured in red. (b) Aptamer with interchangeable genotype and phenotype.
Figure 2General selection scheme for random combinatorial libraries.
A selection of random combinatorial libraries technologies based on the concept of phenotype and genotype linkage.
| Technology | Phenotype | Genotype | Link | Diversities | Reference | Amplification/synthesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| peptide/protein | ssDNA | viral particle | 106–1010 | [ | ||
| peptide/protein | plasmid | intracellular | 108–1011 | [ | ||
| peptide/protein | plasmid | intracellular | 109 | [ | ||
| peptide/protein | mRNA | complexed | 1013 | [ | ||
| peptide/protein | mRNA | covalent | 1013 | [ | ||
| protein | DNA | micelle compartment | 108–1011 | [ | ||
| RNA | RNA | covalent | 1015 | [ |
| |
| DNA | DNA | covalent | 1015 | [ |
| |
| PNA | DNA | colavent | 108 | [ | ||
| synthetic compound | DNA | covalent | 108 | [ |
Feature comparison of phage display and SELEX-derived binders.
| Binder | Peptide | Antibody | RNA | DNA | Spiegelmer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| medium | strong | low | medium | strong | |
| strong | low-medium | medium | strong | as RNA or DNA | |
| yes | no | yes | yes | yes | |
| chemical/ | cell culture | chemical/ | chemical | chemical | |
| no (size and structure dependent) | yes (needs humanisation) | no | no | no | |
| low-medium | high | low-medium | low | medium-high | |
| low-medium | high | high | medium-high | as RNA or DNA |
Comparison of phage display and SELEX procedure with estimated duration of conventional protocols.
| Phage display | RNA SELEX | DNA SELEX | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Incubation, partitioning, retrieval, 2 hours | Incubation, partitioning, retrieval, 2 hours | Incubation, partitioning, retrieval, 2 hours | |
| reinfection, growth, superinfection, purification, 1–2 days | reverse transcription, PCR, transcription, purification, 2 days | PCR, ssDNA generation, purification, 4–6 hours | |
| 4 | 10 to 15 | 10 to 15 | |
| 5–8 days | 20–45 days | 10–20 days | |
| reinfection, colony generation, picking, glycerol stocks, 2 days | vector ligation, transformation, colony generation, picking, glycerol stocks, 2 days | vector ligation, transformation, colony generation, picking, glycerol stocks, 2 days | |
| growth, superinfection, phage ELISA, 2 days | PCR, transcription, purification, FLAA, 2 days | PCR, ssDNA preparation, purification, FLAA, 2 days | |
| 9–12 days | 24–49 days | 14–24 days | |
| low | medium-high | low |
Figure 3Principle of aspiration-free magnetic bead handling. Particles can be captured by a magnet covered by a plastic sheath and transferred to a new well by withdrawal of the attracting magnet from its cover (Figure taken from [55]; © 2009 BioTechniques. Used with Permission.).