| Literature DB >> 30700146 |
Tao Wang1,2, Wang Yin2, Hadi AlShamaileh2, Yumei Zhang2, Phuong Ha-Lien Tran2, Tuong Ngoc-Gia Nguyen2, Yong Li3, Kuisheng Chen4, Miaomiao Sun5, Yingchun Hou6, Weihong Zhang1, Qingxia Zhao1, Changying Chen1, Pei-Zhuo Zhang7,8, Wei Duan2,8.
Abstract
As a nucleic acid alternative to traditional antibody, aptamer holds great potential in various fields of biology and medicine such as targeted gene therapy, drug delivery, bio-sensing, and laboratory medicine. Over the past decades, the conventional Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment (SELEX) method has undergone dramatic modifications and improvements owing to developments in material sciences and analytical techniques. However, many of the recently developed strategies either require complex materials and instruments or suffer from low efficiency and high failure rates in the selection of desired aptamers. Accordingly, the development of aptamers against new or novel targets is still a major obstacle for aptamer-based research and application. Here, an improved protein-SELEX procedure is presented for simplified and highly efficient isolation of aptamers against protein targets. Approaches are described that ensure a high success rate in aptamer selection by simplifying polymerase chain reaction procedures, introducing denature gel, utilizing an electro-elution-based single-stranded DNA separation strategy, as well as an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay-based highly sensitive binding assay. In addition, a simplified sample preparation method for MiSeq-based next-generation sequencing is also introduced. While a recombinant protein as a bait protein for SELEX is discussed here, this protocol will also be invaluable for researchers wishing to develop aptamers against targets other than proteins such as small molecules, lipids, carbohydrates, cells, and micro-organisms for future gene therapy and/or diagnostics.Entities:
Keywords: SELEX; aptamer; electro-elution; gene therapy; method; next-generation sequencing
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30700146 DOI: 10.1089/hgtb.2018.237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther Methods ISSN: 1946-6536 Impact factor: 2.396