| Literature DB >> 26530075 |
Maureen McKeague1, Erin M McConnell1, Jose Cruz-Toledo2, Elyse D Bernard3, Amanda Pach1, Emily Mastronardi1, Xueru Zhang1, Michael Beking1, Tariq Francis1, Amanda Giamberardino1, Ashley Cabecinha1, Annamaria Ruscito1, Rocio Aranda-Rodriguez3, Michel Dumontier4,5, Maria C DeRosa6.
Abstract
Nucleic acid aptamers are novel molecular recognition tools that offer many advantages compared to their antibody and peptide-based counterparts. However, challenges associated with in vitro selection, characterization, and validation have limited their wide-spread use in the fields of diagnostics and therapeutics. Here, we extracted detailed information about aptamer selection experiments housed in the Aptamer Base, spanning over two decades, to perform the first parameter analysis of conditions used to identify and isolate aptamers de novo. We used information from 492 published SELEX experiments and studied the relationships between the nucleic acid library, target choice, selection methods, experimental conditions, and the affinity of the resulting aptamer candidates. Our findings highlight that the choice of target and selection template made the largest and most significant impact on the success of a de novo aptamer selection. Our results further emphasize the need for improved documentation and more thorough experimentation of SELEX criteria to determine their correlation with SELEX success.Keywords: Aptamer; Aptamer target; Database; In vitro selection; SELEX
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26530075 DOI: 10.1007/s00239-015-9708-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Evol ISSN: 0022-2844 Impact factor: 2.395