| Literature DB >> 27379229 |
Franziska Pfeiffer1, Günter Mayer1.
Abstract
Small molecules play a major role in the human body and as drugs, toxins, and chemicals. Tools to detect and quantify them are therefore in high demand. This review will give an overview about aptamers interacting with small molecules and their selection. We discuss the current state of the field, including advantages as well as problems associated with their use and possible solutions to tackle these. We then discuss different kinds of small molecule aptamer-based sensors described in literature and their applications, ranging from detecting drinking water contaminations to RNA imaging.Entities:
Keywords: aptamer; aptasensor; oligonucleotide; sensor; small molecule
Year: 2016 PMID: 27379229 PMCID: PMC4908669 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2016.00025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Aptamers for small molecule targets described in literature from 2012 to 2015.
| Digoxin | 8–44 | DNA | 2012 | Kiani et al., |
| Kanamycin A | 3900–24000 | DNA | 2012 | Stoltenburg et al., |
| Lysergamine | 44–499 | DNA | 2012 | Rouah-Martin et al., |
| Sulfadimethoxine | 84–150 | DNA | 2012 | Song et al., |
| Trinitrotoluene (TNT) | not reported | DNA | 2012 | Ho et al., |
| Abscisic acid | 800–1000 | DNA | 2013 | Grozio et al., |
| Codeine | 910 | DNA | 2013 | Huang et al., |
| N-acetylneuraminic acid | 1.4 | RNA | 2013 | Cho et al., |
| N-glycolylneuraminic acid | 6.7 | DNA | 2013 | Gong et al., |
| N-methyl-mesoporphyrin | 1200–43000 | DNA | 2013 | Yang and Bowser, |
| Okadaic acid | 77–983 | DNA | 2013 | Eissa et al., |
| Saxitoxin | 133 | DNA | 2013, 2015 | Handy et al., |
| Streptomycin | 199–341 | DNA | 2013 | Zhou et al., |
| Xanthine | 4200–18100 | DNA | 2013 | Bae et al., |
| Zearalenone | 41 | DNA | 2013 | Chen et al., |
| 17ß-Estradiol | 900–124000 | DNA | 2014 | Vanschoenbeek et al., |
| 17ß-estradiol | 50 | DNA | 2014 | Alsager et al., |
| Aflatoxin B1 | 96–221 | DNA | 2014 | Malhotra et al., |
| Aflatoxin B1 | 650 | DNA | 2014 | Zhu et al., |
| Aflatoxin M1 | 35–1515 | DNA | 2014 | Malhotra et al., |
| Azobenzene-peptide | not reported | RNA | 2014 | Hayashi and Nakatani, |
| Bromacil | 9.6 | DNA | 2014 | Williams et al., |
| Cortisol | 7000–16000 | DNA | 2014 | Martin et al., |
| Cylindrospermopsin | 57–180 | DNA | 2014 | Elshafey et al., |
| Danofloxacin | 3–7.7 | 2′F-RNA | 2014 | Han et al., |
| DFHBI-IT | 360 | RNA | 2014 | Filonov et al., |
| Kanamycin A | 2800–163000 | DNA | 2014 | Nikolaus and Strehlitz, |
| Ketamine | 590–660 | DNA | 2014 | Sun M.Q. et al., |
| Ochratoxin A | 110–370 | DNA | 2014 | McKeague et al., |
| Oxytetracycline | 4.9 | DNA | 2014 | Kim et al., |
| Progesterone | 10–133 | DNA | 2014 | Contreras Jiménez et al., |
| Sphingosine-1-phosphate | 4.3 | L-RNA | 2014 | Purschke et al., |
| T-2 toxin | 20.8 | DNA | 2014 | Chen et al., |
| Thiazole orange | 3.2 | RNA | 2014 | Dolgosheina et al., |
| Trinitrotoluene (TNT) | 100 | DNA | 2014 | Priyanka et al., |
| 17ß-estradiol | 600 | DNA | 2015 | Akki et al., |
| 17α-ethynylestradiol | 500–1000 | DNA | 2015 | Akki et al., |
| Anatoxin-a | 15–81 | DNA | 2015 | Elshafey et al., |
| Brevetoxin-2 | 42 | DNA | 2015 | Eissa et al., |
| DFHBI | not reported | RNA | 2015 | Zou et al., |
| Dinitroaniline | 100 | RNA | 2015 | Arora et al., |
| Melamine | 510 | DNA | 2015 | Gu et al., |
| Quinolone | 0.1–56.9 | DNA | 2015 | Reinemann et al., |
Given are the K.
(Z)-4-(3,5-difluoro-4-hydroxybenzylidene)-1,2-dimethyl-1H-imidazol-5(4H)-one.
Selection was performed in bacterial cells to select for high fluorescence, not affinity.
NMR and X-ray crystallography structures of aptamers for small molecules that have been deposited into the Protein Data Bank (PDB).
| AMP | 1AM0 | RNA | NMR | 1996 | Jiang et al., |
| AMP | 1RAW | RNA | NMR | 1996 | Dieckmann et al., |
| AMP | 1AW4 | DNA | NMR | 1997 | Lin et al., |
| Argininamide | 1DB6 | DNA | NMR | 2000 | Robertson et al., |
| Arginine | 1KOC | RNA | NMR | 1996 | Yang et al., |
| Arginine | 2ARG | DNA | NMR | 1998 | Lin et al., |
| Biotin | 1F27 | RNA | X-ray | 2000 | Nix et al., |
| Citrulline | 1KOD | RNA | NMR | 1996 | Yang et al., |
| Cyanocobalamin | 1DDY | RNA | X-ray | 2000 | Sussman et al., |
| Cyanocobalamin | 1ET4 | RNA | X-ray | 2000 | Sussman and Wilson, |
| DFHBI | 4Q9Q, 4Q9R, 4KZD, and 4KZE | RNA | X-ray | 2014 | Huang et al., |
| DFHBI | 4TS2 and 4TS0 | RNA | X-ray | 2014 | Warner et al., |
| FMN | 1FMN | RNA | NMR | 1996 | Fan et al., |
| GTP | 2AU4 | RNA | NMR | 2006 | Carothers et al., |
| Malachite Green | 1F1T | RNA | X-ray | 2000 | Baugh et al., |
| Malachite Green | 1Q8N | RNA | NMR | 2004 | Flinders et al., |
| Neomycin B | 1NEM | RNA | NMR | 1999 | Jiang et al., |
| Streptomycin | 1NTB and 1NTA | RNA | X-ray | 2003 | Tereshko et al., |
| Tetracycline | 3EGZ | RNA | X-ray | 2008 | Xiao et al., |
| Theophylline | 1EHT | RNA | NMR | 1997 | Zimmermann et al., |
| Theophylline | 1O15 | RNA | NMR | 2003 | Clore and Kuszewski, |
| Tobramycin | 1TOB | RNA | NMR | 1997 | Jiang et al., |
| Tobramycin | 2TOB | RNA | NMR | 1998 | Jiang and Patel, |
AMP, adenosine monophosphate.
Companies involved in aptamer commercialization; offering aptamers, their generation, and/or application.
| Alpha Diagnostic International | United States | 1993 | |
| AMBiotech | United States | 2009 | |
| AptaBiosciences | Singapore | 2013 | |
| Apta Biotherapeutics | South Korea | 2013 | |
| Aptagen | United States | 2004 | |
| Aptahem | Sweden | 2014 | |
| Aptamer Group | United Kingdom | 2008 | |
| Aptamatrix | United States | 2003 | |
| Apterna | United Kingdom | 2011 | |
| Aptitude Medical | United States | 2011 | |
| Aptus Biotech | Spain | 2010 | |
| Aptamer Sciences | South Korea | 2011 | |
| Basepair Technologies | United States | 2011 | |
| Berlin Cures GmbH | Germany | 2014 | |
| CD Genomics | United States | 2004 | |
| Ice9Biotechnologies | United States | 2009 | |
| Neoventures Biotechnology | Canada | 2002 | |
| Novaptech | France | 2008 | |
| NOXXON Pharma Ag | Germany | 1998 | |
| Ribomic | Japan | 2003 | |
| SomaLogic | United States | 2000 |
also Aptasol, AptaDx, AptaRx, and Aptasort.
also Aptatargets—.
Commercially available, chemically modified matrices for target immobilization for small molecule aptamer selections.
| COOH CHO | hydrazide | Adipic acid dihydrazide Agarose | |
| COOH CHO (EAH Sepharose only) | amine | M-270 Amine | EAH Sepharose 4B |
| NH2 | aldehyde | AminoLink Plus Coupling Resin | |
| NH2 | cyanogen bromide | CNBr-Activated Sepharose 4B | |
| NH2 | N-hydroxy succinimide (NHS) | NHS-Activated Sepharose E Fast Flow | |
| NH2 N-nucleophiles | carbonyl diimidazole | Pierce CDI-activated Agarose Resin | |
| NH2 SH | tosylactivated | M-280 Tosylactivated MyOne Tosylactivated | |
| NH2 SH (Dynabeads only) | carboxylic acid | M-270 Carboxylic Acid MyOne Carboxylic Acid | ECH Sepharose 4B |
| NH2 SH OH (Sepharose only) | epoxy | M-270 Epoxy | Epoxy-Activated Sepharose 6B |
| SH | iodacetyl | SulfoLink Coupling Resin | |
| SH heavy metal ions alkyl and aryl halides addition to C=O C=C N=N | thiol | Activated Thiol Sepharose 4B |
Manufacturers are indicated by superscripted capitals.
brand name Dynabeads.
GE Healthcare.
Sigma.
Bio-Rad.
ThermoFisher Scientific.
Figure 1Small molecule aptasensor types. Depicted is an example for a sensor for the three most widely used types for small molecule targets. F, fluorophore. Q, quencher. AuNPs, gold nanoparticles. R, redox probe. (A) The aptamer is labeled with a fluorophore and an appropriate quencher. Upon binding to the target, the conformational change of the aptamer brings fluorophore and quencher into close contact, thereby quenching the fluorescence. (B) The aptamer is unspecifically absorbed onto the surface of AuNPs and thus prevents their aggregation. Upon binding to the target, the AuNPs aggregate. This leads to a visible color change from red to blue. (C) The aptamer is immobilized onto an electrode and labeled with a redox probe. The conformational change upon target binding brings the probe close enough to the electrode to allow electron transfer and thus, an electrochemical readout.
Figure 2Small molecule aptasensor application fields. Depicted is an example for a small molecule target of the respective field including its chemical structure.