| Literature DB >> 35540214 |
Kun Li1,2,3, Liqing Qi1,2,3, LiMing Gao4, Ming Shi1,2,3, Jian Li1,2,3, ZhiWei Liu1,2,3, Lu Zhao1,2.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer is one of the common causes of malignant tumors in recent years, thus the discovery of potential compounds that detect the occurrence of colorectal cancer by efficient approaches is necessary. In this study, the method of systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) was used for recognizing serum from colorectal cancer patients by a single-stranded DNA library of aptamers assisted by single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) to remove single-stranded DNA with low affinity. Ten rounds of selection were applied using colorectal cancer serum as a target with the serum of healthy individuals as a control. As the result, we have successfully identified four candidate aptamers after high-throughput genome sequencing analysis, comparison analysis and secondary structure prediction. Among them, aptamer Seq-2 exhibited the highest affinity and the strongest selectivity with an equilibrium dissociation constant (K d) of 11.31 ± 3.25 nM and a C t difference value of 4.25 ± 0.38 between the colorectal cancer group and the healthy group. Moreover, with fifty negative control serum samples, the positive detection rate of fifty positive serum samples tested by aptamer Seq-2 was over 90%. In particular, aptamer Seq-2 can strongly bind the colorectal cancer serum, less strongly bind the non-colon cancer serum and hardly bind the healthy serum. Therefore, aptamer Seq-2 presents enormous potential for exploring as a tumor diagnostic kit and detecting unknown tumor markers in serum to reflect colorectal cancer. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35540214 PMCID: PMC9075956 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra04777h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of a subtractive SELEX protocol for generation of aptamers toward colorectal cancer serum.
Sequences of candidate nucleic acid aptamers against the serum of colorectal cancer patients
| Aptamer name | Sequence |
|---|---|
| Seq-1 | 5′-CTATAGCAATGGTACGGTACTTCCCCTTGTCGATTCATAATGTTCGTGGAACTCGCTCTCGGGACAAAAGTGCACGCTACTTTGCTAA-3′ |
| Seq-2 | 5′-CTATAGCAATGGTACGGTACTTCCTAACTCGTCCCTACCGAGCCTCTCTCTGGTCCTTGCAACTCAAAAGTGCACGCTACTTTGCTAA-3′ |
| Seq-3 | 5′-CTATAGCAATGGTACGGTACTTCCTAGTTGAGCATTATACACATTGACTGGGCTGTTCTTCTGTCAAAAGTGCACGCTACTTTGCTAA-3′ |
| Seq-4 | 5′-CTATAGCAATGGTACGGTACTTCCTGCTGGTTCGGCATGGCTTGCGACTGTCCCTGCGCATTTCCAAAAGTGCACGCTACTTTGCTAA-3′ |
Fig. 2Binding saturation curve of four aptamer candidates to colorectal cancer serum. Error bars represent standard deviation from triplicate analysis.
Fig. 3Selectivity analysis of aptamer candidates based fluorescence. (A) the evaluation the selectivity of these aptamer sequences with three control aptamer pools toward colorectal cancer serum. (B) The four aptamer candidates tested with multifarious serum proteins. Error bars represent standard deviation from triplicate analysis.
Fig. 4Selectivity analysis of aptamer candidates by PCR. (A) Mean ΔCT of the four aptamers against 50 serum samples from colorectal cancer patients' samples. (B) The positive detection rates of the four aptamers against 50 serum samples from colorectal cancer patients samples. Error bars represent standard deviation from 50 serum samples analysis.
Fig. 5(A) Blood samples assay with aptamers Seq-2 biorecognition ***P < 0.001 compared both the blank control group and the healthy control group indicated that the aptamer Seq-2 possessed high selectivity to the serum from colorectal cancer patients. (B) Mean CT of the aptamers Seq-2 against serum samples of fifty colorectal cancer patients, fifty healthy patients and ultrapure water. The ΔCT value of the aptamers Seq-2 was nearly five indicated the same result.