Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 31
Filtrar
Más filtros










Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 4057, 2024 May 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38744910

RESUMEN

With just four building blocks, low sequence information density, few functional groups, poor control over folding, and difficulties in forming compact folds, natural DNA and RNA have been disappointing platforms from which to evolve receptors, ligands, and catalysts. Accordingly, synthetic biology has created "artificially expanded genetic information systems" (AEGIS) to add nucleotides, functionality, and information density. With the expected improvements seen in AegisBodies and AegisZymes, the task for synthetic biologists shifts to developing for expanded DNA the same analytical tools available to natural DNA. Here we report one of these, an enzyme-assisted sequencing of expanded genetic alphabet (ESEGA) method to sequence six-letter AEGIS DNA. We show how ESEGA analyses this DNA at single base resolution, and applies it to optimized conditions for six-nucleotide PCR, assessing the fidelity of various DNA polymerases, and extending this to AEGIS components with functional groups. This supports the renewed exploitation of expanded DNA alphabets in biotechnology.


Asunto(s)
ADN , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento/métodos , ADN/genética , ADN/metabolismo , Biología Sintética/métodos , ADN Polimerasa Dirigida por ADN/metabolismo , ADN Polimerasa Dirigida por ADN/genética , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa/métodos , Secuencia de Bases , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN/métodos
2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(18): e202402007, 2024 Apr 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38407551

RESUMEN

Pathological hyperphosphorylation and aggregation of microtubule-associated Tau protein contribute to Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and other related tauopathies. Currently, no cure exists for Alzheimer's Disease. Aptamers offer significant potential as next-generation therapeutics in biotechnology and the treatment of neurological disorders. Traditional aptamer selection methods for Tau protein focus on binding affinity rather than interference with pathological Tau. In this study, we developed a new selection strategy to enrich DNA aptamers that bind to surviving monomeric Tau protein under conditions that would typically promote Tau aggregation. Employing this approach, we identified a set of aptamer candidates. Notably, BW1c demonstrates a high binding affinity (Kd=6.6 nM) to Tau protein and effectively inhibits arachidonic acid (AA)-induced Tau protein oligomerization and aggregation. Additionally, it inhibits GSK3ß-mediated Tau hyperphosphorylation in cell-free systems and okadaic acid-mediated Tau hyperphosphorylation in cellular milieu. Lastly, retro-orbital injection of BW1c tau aptamer shows the ability to cross the blood brain barrier and gain access to neuronal cell body. Through further refinement and development, these Tau aptamers may pave the way for a first-in-class neurotherapeutic to mitigate tauopathy-associated neurodegenerative disorders.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad de Alzheimer , Tauopatías , Proteínas tau , Humanos , Enfermedad de Alzheimer/metabolismo , Neuronas/metabolismo , Ácido Ocadaico/metabolismo , Ácido Ocadaico/farmacología , Ácido Ocadaico/uso terapéutico , Fosforilación , Proteínas tau/antagonistas & inhibidores , Proteínas tau/metabolismo , Tauopatías/tratamiento farmacológico , Tauopatías/metabolismo , Tauopatías/patología , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/química , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/farmacología
3.
Res Sq ; 2023 Dec 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38196584

RESUMEN

Many efforts have sought to apply laboratory in vitro evolution (LIVE) to natural nucleic acid (NA) scaffolds to directly evolve functional molecules. However, synthetic biology can move beyond natural NA scaffolds to create molecular systems whose libraries are far richer reservoirs of functionality than natural NAs. For example, "artificially expanded genetic information systems" (AEGIS) add up to eight nucleotides to the four found in standard NA. Even in its simplest 6-letter versions, AEGIS adds functional groups, information density, and folding motifs that natural NA libraries lack. To complete this vision, however, tools are needed to sequence molecules that are created by AEGIS LIVE. Previous sequencing approaches, including approaches from our laboratories, exhibited limited performance and lost many sequences in diverse library mixtures. Here, we present a new approach that enzymatically transforms the target AEGIS DNA. With higher transliteration efficiency and fidelity, this Enzyme-Assisted Sequencing of Expanded Genetic Alphabet (ESEGA) approach produces substantially better sequences of 6-letter (AGCTZP) DNA than previous transliteration approaches. Therefore, ESEGA facilitates precise analysis of libraries, allowing 'next-generation deep sequencing' to accurately quantify the sequences of 6-letter DNA molecules at single base resolution. We then applied ESEGA to three tasks: (a) defining optimal conditions to perform 6-nucleotide PCR (b) evaluating the fidelity of 6-nucleotide PCR with various DNA polymerases, and (c) extending that evaluation to AEGIS components functionalized with alkynyl and aromatic groups. No other approach at present has this scope, allowing this work to be the next step towards exploiting the potential of expanded DNA alphabets in biotechnology.

4.
PLoS One ; 16(2): e0240524, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33626039

RESUMEN

Managing the pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 requires new capabilities in testing, including the possibility of identifying, in minutes, infected individuals as they enter spaces where they must congregate in a functioning society, including workspaces, schools, points of entry, and commercial business establishments. Here, the only useful tests (a) require no sample transport, (b) require minimal sample manipulation, (c) can be performed by unlicensed individuals, (d) return results on the spot in much less than one hour, and (e) cost no more than a few dollars. The sensitivity need not be as high as normally required by the FDA for screening asymptomatic carriers (as few as 10 virions per sample), as these viral loads are almost certainly not high enough for an individual to present a risk for forward infection. This allows tests specifically useful for this pandemic to trade-off unneeded sensitivity for necessary speed, simplicity, and frugality. In some studies, it was shown that viral load that creates forward-infection risk may exceed 105 virions per milliliter, easily within the sensitivity of an RNA amplification architecture, but unattainable by antibody-based architectures that simply target viral antigens. Here, we describe such a test based on a displaceable probe loop amplification architecture.


Asunto(s)
Prueba de COVID-19/métodos , COVID-19/virología , Portador Sano/virología , SARS-CoV-2/aislamiento & purificación , Adulto , Antígenos Virales/genética , COVID-19/diagnóstico , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/genética , Portador Sano/diagnóstico , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Pandemias , ARN Viral/genética , SARS-CoV-2/genética , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Carga Viral
5.
Biol Methods Protoc ; 5(1): bpaa004, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32395633

RESUMEN

Despite its widespread value to molecular biology, the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) encounters modes that unproductively consume PCR resources and prevent clean signals, especially when high sensitivity, high SNP discrimination, and high multiplexing are sought. Here, we show how "self-avoiding molecular recognition systems" (SAMRS) manage such difficulties. SAMRS nucleobases pair with complementary nucleotides with strengths comparable to the A:T pair, but do not pair with other SAMRS nucleobases. This should allow primers holding SAMRS components to avoid primer-primer interactions, preventing primer dimers, allowing more sensitive SNP detection, and supporting higher levels of multiplex PCR. The experiments here examine the PCR performances of primers containing different numbers of SAMRS components placed strategically at different positions, and put these performances in the context of estimates of SAMRS:standard pairing strengths. The impact of these variables on primer dimer formation, the overall efficiency and sensitivity of SAMRS-based PCR, and the value of SAMRS primers when detecting single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are also evaluated. With appropriately chosen polymerases, SNP discrimination can be greater than the conventional allele-specific PCR, with the further benefit of avoiding primer dimer artifacts. General rules guiding the design of SAMRS-modified primers are offered to support medical research and clinical diagnostics products.

6.
Nanomicro Lett ; 12(1): 103, 2020 May 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34138099

RESUMEN

Investigation of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) for biomedical applications has attracted much attention in recent years. MOFs are regarded as a promising class of nanocarriers for drug delivery owing to well-defined structure, ultrahigh surface area and porosity, tunable pore size, and easy chemical functionalization. In this review, the unique properties of MOFs and their advantages as nanocarriers for drug delivery in biomedical applications were discussed in the first section. Then, state-of-the-art strategies to functionalize MOFs with therapeutic agents were summarized, including surface adsorption, pore encapsulation, covalent binding, and functional molecules as building blocks. In the third section, the most recent biological applications of MOFs for intracellular delivery of drugs, proteins, and nucleic acids, especially aptamers, were presented. Finally, challenges and prospects were comprehensively discussed to provide context for future development of MOFs as efficient drug delivery systems.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(2): 663-668, 2020 01 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31650689

RESUMEN

Expanding the number of nucleotides in DNA increases the information density of functional DNA molecules, creating nanoassemblies that cannot be invaded by natural DNA/RNA in complex biological systems. Here, we show how six-letter GACTZP DNA contributes this property in two parts of a nanoassembly: 1) in an aptamer evolved from a six-letter DNA library to selectively bind liver cancer cells; and 2) in a six-letter self-assembling GACTZP nanotrain that carries the drug doxorubicin. The aptamer-nanotrain assembly, charged with doxorubicin, selectively kills liver cancer cells in culture, as the selectivity of the aptamer binding directs doxorubicin into the aptamer-targeted cells. The assembly does not kill untransformed cells that the aptamer does not bind. This architecture, built with an expanded genetic alphabet, is reminiscent of antibodies conjugated to drugs, which presumably act by this mechanism as well, but with the antibody replaced by an aptamer.


Asunto(s)
Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/química , ADN/química , Doxorrubicina/uso terapéutico , Neoplasias Hepáticas/tratamiento farmacológico , Línea Celular Tumoral , Doxorrubicina/farmacología , Humanos , Neoplasias Hepáticas/genética
8.
Biochemistry ; 59(4): 552-562, 2020 02 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31880917

RESUMEN

Here we are reporting, for the first time, a ligand-guided selection (LIGS) experiment using an artificially expanded genetic information system (AEGIS) to successfully identify an AEGIS-DNA aptamer against T cell receptor-CD3ε expressed on Jurkat.E6 cells. Thus, we have effectively combined the enhanced diversity of an AEGIS DNA library with LIGS to develop a superior screening platform to discover superior aptamers. Libraries of DNA molecules from highly diversified building blocks will provide better ligands due to more functional diversity and better-controlled folding. Thus, a DNA library with AEGIS components (dZ and dP) was used in LIGS experiments against TCR-CD3ε in its native state using two clinically relevant monoclonal antibodies to identify an aptamer termed JZPO-10, with nanomolar affinity. Multiple specificity assays using knockout cells, and competition experiments using monoclonal antibodies utilized in LIGS, show unprecedented specificity of JZPO-10, suggesting that the combination of LIGS with AEGIS-DNA libraries will provide a superior screening platform to discover artificial ligands against critical cellular targets.


Asunto(s)
Complejo CD3/genética , Complejo CD3/inmunología , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/genética , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/inmunología , Complejo CD3/metabolismo , Biblioteca de Genes , Humanos , Células Jurkat , Ligandos , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfocitos T/genética , Receptores de Antígenos de Linfocitos T/inmunología , Técnica SELEX de Producción de Aptámeros/métodos
9.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 46(12): 5902-5910, 2018 07 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29800323

RESUMEN

Described here are the synthesis, enzymology and some applications of a purine nucleoside analog (H) designed to have two tautomeric forms, one complementary to thymidine (T), the other complementary to cytidine (C). The performance of H is compared by various metrics to performances of other 'biversal' analogs that similarly rely on tautomerism to complement both pyrimidines. These include (i) the thermodynamic stability of duplexes that pair these biversals with various standard nucleotides, (ii) the ability of the biversals to support polymerase chain reaction (PCR), (iii) the ability of primers containing biversals to equally amplify targets having polymorphisms in the primer binding site, and (iv) the ability of ligation-based assays to exploit the biversals to detect medically relevant single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in sequences flanked by medically irrelevant polymorphisms. One advantage of H over the widely used inosine 'universal base' and 'mixed sequence' probes is seen in ligation-based assays to detect SNPs. The need to detect medically relevant SNPs within ambiguous sequences is especially important when probing RNA viruses, which rapidly mutate to create drug resistance, but also suffer neutral drift, the second obstructing simple methods to detect the first. Thus, H is being developed to detect variants of viruses that are rapidly mutating.


Asunto(s)
Nucleósidos/química , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Cartilla de ADN , Isomerismo , Mutación , Nucleósidos/síntesis química , Oligonucleótidos/síntesis química , Oligonucleótidos/química , Purinas/química , Temperatura
10.
BMC Infect Dis ; 17(1): 293, 2017 04 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28427352

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Zika, dengue, and chikungunya are three mosquito-borne viruses having overlapping transmission vectors. They cause diseases having similar symptoms in human patients, but requiring different immediate management steps. Therefore, rapid (< one hour) discrimination of these three viruses in patient samples and trapped mosquitoes is needed. The need for speed precludes any assay that requires complex up-front sample preparation, such as extraction of nucleic acids from the sample. Also precluded in robust point-of-sampling assays is downstream release of the amplicon mixture, as this risks contamination of future samples that will give false positives. METHODS: Procedures are reported that directly test urine and plasma (for patient diagnostics) or crushed mosquito carcasses (for environmental surveillance). Carcasses are captured on paper samples carrying quaternary ammonium groups (Q-paper), which may be directly introduced into the assay. To avoid the time and instrumentation requirements of PCR, the procedure uses loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP). Downstream detection is done in sealed tubes, with dTTP-dUTP mixtures in the LAMP with a thermolabile uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG); this offers a second mechanism to prevent forward contamination. Reverse transcription LAMP (RT-LAMP) reagents are distributed dry without requiring a continuous chain of refrigeration. RESULTS: The tests detect viral RNA in unprocessed urine and other biological samples, distinguishing Zika, chikungunya, and dengue in urine and in mosquitoes infected with live Zika and chikungunya viruses. The limits of detection (LODs) are ~0.71 pfu equivalent viral RNAs for Zika, ~1.22 pfu equivalent viral RNAs for dengue, and ~38 copies of chikungunya viral RNA. A handheld, battery-powered device with an orange filter was constructed to visualize the output. Preliminary data showed that this architecture, working with pre-prepared tubes holding lyophilized reagent/enzyme mixtures and shipped without a chain of refrigeration, also worked with human plasma samples to detect chikungunya and dengue in Pune, India. CONCLUSIONS: A kit, complete with a visualization device, is now available for point-of-sampling detection of Zika, chikungunya, and dengue. The assay output is read in ca. 30 min by visualizing (human eye) three-color coded fluorescence signals. Assay in dried format allows it to be run in low-resource environments.


Asunto(s)
Fiebre Chikungunya/diagnóstico , Dengue/diagnóstico , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Infección por el Virus Zika/diagnóstico , Animales , Virus Chikungunya/genética , Culicidae , Dengue/sangre , Dengue/orina , Virus del Dengue/genética , Virus del Dengue/patogenicidad , Femenino , Humanos , India , Límite de Detección , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/instrumentación , ARN Viral/análisis , ARN Viral/genética , ARN Viral/orina , Juego de Reactivos para Diagnóstico , Transcripción Reversa , Virus Zika/genética , Virus Zika/aislamiento & purificación , Virus Zika/patogenicidad
11.
PLoS One ; 12(3): e0174163, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28323896

RESUMEN

One research goal for unnatural base pair (UBP) is to replicate, transcribe and translate them in vivo. Accordingly, the corresponding unnatural nucleoside triphosphates must be available at sufficient concentrations within the cell. To achieve this goal, the unnatural nucleoside analogues must be phosphorylated to the corresponding nucleoside triphosphates by a cascade of three kinases. The first step is the monophosphorylation of unnatural deoxynucleoside catalyzed by deoxynucleoside kinases (dNK), which is generally considered the rate limiting step because of the high specificity of dNKs. Here, we applied a Drosophila melanogaster deoxyribonucleoside kinase (DmdNK) to the phosphorylation of an UBP (a pyrimidine analogue (6-amino-5-nitro-3-(1'-b-d-2'-deoxyribofuranosyl)-2(1H)-pyridone, Z) and its complementary purine analogue (2-amino-8-(1'-b-d-2'-deoxyribofuranosyl)-imidazo[1,2-a]-1,3,5-triazin-4(8H)-one, P). The results showed that DmdNK could efficiently phosphorylate only the dP nucleoside. To improve the catalytic efficiency, a DmdNK-Q81E mutant was created based on rational design and structural analyses. This mutant could efficiently phosphorylate both dZ and dP nucleoside. Structural modeling indicated that the increased efficiency of dZ phosphorylation by the DmdNK-Q81E mutant might be related to the three additional hydrogen bonds formed between E81 and the dZ base. Overall, this study provides a groundwork for the biological phosphorylation and synthesis of unnatural base pair in vivo.


Asunto(s)
Drosophila melanogaster/enzimología , Guanosina/análogos & derivados , Monosacáridos/metabolismo , Nucleótidos/química , Fosfotransferasas (Aceptor de Grupo Alcohol)/genética , Animales , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/genética , Emparejamiento Base/genética , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Guanosina/metabolismo , Fosforilación , Fosfotransferasas (Aceptor de Grupo Alcohol)/metabolismo , Especificidad por Sustrato
12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(40): 12372-5, 2016 09 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27601357

RESUMEN

Laboratory in vitro evolution (LIVE) might deliver DNA aptamers that bind proteins expressed on the surface of cells. In this work, we used cell engineering to place glypican 3 (GPC3), a possible marker for liver cancer theranostics, on the surface of a liver cell line. Libraries were then built from a six-letter genetic alphabet containing the standard nucleobases and two added nucleobases (2-amino-8H-imidazo[1,2-a][1,3,5]triazin-4-one and 6-amino-5-nitropyridin-2-one), Watson-Crick complements from an artificially expanded genetic information system (AEGIS). With counterselection against non-engineered cells, eight AEGIS-containing aptamers were recovered. Five bound selectively to GPC3-overexpressing cells. This selection-counterselection scheme had acceptable statistics, notwithstanding the possibility that cells engineered to overexpress GPC3 might also express different off-target proteins. This is the first example of such a combination.


Asunto(s)
Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/metabolismo , Glipicanos/metabolismo , Animales , Aptámeros de Nucleótidos/química , Secuencia de Bases , Ingeniería Celular , Línea Celular , Técnicas de Laboratorio Clínico , Citometría de Flujo , Glipicanos/química , Glipicanos/genética , Humanos , Ratones , Unión Proteica
13.
J Virol Methods ; 237: 64-71, 2016 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27546345

RESUMEN

Noroviruses are the major cause of global viral gastroenteritis with short incubation times and small inoculums required for infection. This creates a need for a rapid molecular test for norovirus for early diagnosis, in the hope of preventing the spread of the disease. Non-chemists generally use off-the shelf reagents and natural DNA to create such tests, suffering from background noise that comes from adventitious DNA and RNA (collectively xNA) that is abundant in real biological samples, especially feces, a common location for norovirus. Here, we create an assay that combines artificially expanded genetic information systems (AEGIS, which adds nucleotides to the four in standard xNA, pairing orthogonally to A:T and G:C) with loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) to amplify norovirus RNA at constant temperatures, without the power or instrument requirements of PCR cycling. This assay was then validated using feces contaminated with murine norovirus (MNV). Treating stool samples with ammonia extracts the MNV RNA, which is then amplified in an AEGIS-RT-LAMP where AEGIS segments are incorporated both into an internal LAMP primer and into a molecular beacon stem, the second lowering background signaling noise. This is coupled with RNase H nicking during sample amplification, allowing detection of as few as 10 copies of noroviral RNA in a stool sample, generating a fluorescent signal visible to human eye, all in a closed reaction vessel.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Caliciviridae/diagnóstico , Heces/virología , Gastroenteritis/diagnóstico , Norovirus/genética , Norovirus/aislamiento & purificación , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , ARN Viral/aislamiento & purificación , Infecciones por Caliciviridae/virología , Cartilla de ADN/genética , Gastroenteritis/virología , Humanos , Sondas Moleculares , ARN Viral/genética , Ribonucleasa H/genética , Ribonucleasa H/metabolismo , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Temperatura
14.
Anal Biochem ; 489: 62-72, 2015 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26299645

RESUMEN

Nucleic acid (NA)-targeted tests detect and quantify viral DNA and RNA (collectively xNA) to support epidemiological surveillance and, in individual patients, to guide therapy. They commonly use polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse transcription PCR. Although these all have rapid turnaround, they are expensive to run. Multiplexing would allow their cost to be spread over multiple targets, but often only with lower sensitivity and accuracy, noise, false positives, and false negatives; these arise by interactions between the multiple nucleic acid primers and probes in a multiplexed kit. Here we offer a multiplexed assay for a panel of respiratory viruses that mitigates these problems by combining several nucleic acid analogs from the emerging field of synthetic biology: (i) self-avoiding molecular recognition systems (SAMRSs), which facilitate multiplexing, and (ii) artificially expanded genetic information systems (AEGISs), which enable low-noise PCR. These are supplemented by "transliteration" technology, which converts standard nucleotides in a target to AEGIS nucleotides in a product, improving hybridization. The combination supports a multiplexed Luminex-based respiratory panel that potentially differentiates influenza viruses A and B, respiratory syncytial virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS), and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus, detecting as few as 10 MERS virions in a 20-µl sample.


Asunto(s)
Coronaviridae/aislamiento & purificación , Tipificación Molecular/métodos , Orthomyxoviridae/aislamiento & purificación , ARN Viral/aislamiento & purificación , Virus Sincitiales Respiratorios/aislamiento & purificación , Infecciones del Sistema Respiratorio/virología , Coronaviridae/clasificación , Coronaviridae/metabolismo , ADN/metabolismo , ADN de Cadena Simple/metabolismo , ARN Polimerasas Dirigidas por ADN/metabolismo , Desoxirribonucleósidos/metabolismo , Colorantes Fluorescentes/química , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Ácidos Nucleicos Inmovilizados/metabolismo , Límite de Detección , Microesferas , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa Multiplex/métodos , Ácidos Nucleicos Heterodúplex , Hibridación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Orthomyxoviridae/clasificación , Orthomyxoviridae/metabolismo , Ficoeritrina/química , Piridonas/metabolismo , ARN Viral/metabolismo , Virus Sincitiales Respiratorios/clasificación , Virus Sincitiales Respiratorios/metabolismo , Infecciones del Sistema Respiratorio/diagnóstico , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa de Transcriptasa Inversa , Biología Sintética/métodos , Triazinas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo
15.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(34): 9853-6, 2015 Aug 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26223188

RESUMEN

As one of its goals, synthetic biology seeks to increase the number of building blocks in nucleic acids. While efforts towards this goal are well advanced for DNA, they have hardly begun for RNA. Herein, we present a crystal structure for an RNA riboswitch where a stem C:G pair has been replaced by a pair between two components of an artificially expanded genetic-information system (AEGIS), Z and P, (6-amino-5-nitro-2(1H)-pyridone and 2-amino-imidazo[1,2-a]-1,3,5-triazin-4-(8H)-one). The structure shows that the Z:P pair does not greatly change the conformation of the RNA molecule nor the details of its interaction with a hypoxanthine ligand. This was confirmed in solution by in-line probing, which also measured a 3.7 nM affinity of the riboswitch for guanine. These data show that the Z:P pair mimics the natural Watson-Crick geometry in RNA in the first example of a crystal structure of an RNA molecule that contains an orthogonal added nucleobase pair.


Asunto(s)
Conformación de Ácido Nucleico , ARN/química , Emparejamiento Base , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Modelos Moleculares
16.
Chembiochem ; 16(9): 1365-70, 2015 Jun 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25953623

RESUMEN

Assays that detect DNA or RNA (xNA) are highly sensitive, as small amounts of xNA can be amplified by PCR. Unfortunately, PCR is inconvenient in low-resource environments, and requires equipment and power that might not be available in these environments. Isothermal procedures, which avoid thermal cycling, are often confounded by primer dimers, off-target priming, and other artifacts. Here, we show how a "self avoiding molecular recognition system" (SAMRS) eliminates these artifacts and gives clean amplicons in a helicase-dependent isothermal amplification (SAMRS-HDA). We also show that incorporating SAMRS into the 3'-ends of primers facilitates the design and screening of primers for HDA assays. Finally, we show that SAMRS-HDA can be twofold multiplexed, difficult to achieve with HDA using standard primers. Thus, SAMRS-HDA is a more versatile approach than standard HDA, with a broader applicability for xNA-targeted diagnostics and research.


Asunto(s)
ADN Helicasas/metabolismo , ADN/genética , Técnicas de Amplificación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , ARN/genética , Secuencia de Bases , ADN/análisis , Cartilla de ADN/química , Cartilla de ADN/genética , Infecciones por VIH/virología , VIH-1/genética , Humanos , Masculino , Sistemas de Atención de Punto , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa , ARN/análisis , ARN Viral/análisis , ARN Viral/genética , Temperatura
17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(21): 6734-7, 2015 Jun 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25966323

RESUMEN

Axiomatically, the density of information stored in DNA, with just four nucleotides (GACT), is higher than in a binary code, but less than it might be if synthetic biologists succeed in adding independently replicating nucleotides to genetic systems. Such addition could also add functional groups not found in natural DNA, but useful for molecular performance. Here, we consider two new nucleotides (Z and P, 6-amino-5-nitro-3-(1'-ß-D-2'-deoxyribo-furanosyl)-2(1H)-pyridone and 2-amino-8-(1'-ß-D-2'-deoxyribofuranosyl)-imidazo[1,2-a]-1,3,5-triazin-4(8H)-one). These are designed to pair via complete Watson-Crick geometry. These were added to a library of oligonucleotides used in a laboratory in vitro evolution (LIVE) experiment; the GACTZP library was challenged to deliver molecules that bind selectively to liver cancer cells, but not to untransformed liver cells. Unlike in classical in vitro selection, low levels of mutation allow this system to evolve to create binding molecules not necessarily present in the original library. Over a dozen binding species were recovered. The best had Z and/or P in their sequences. Several had multiple, nearby, and adjacent Zs and Ps. Only the weaker binders contained no Z or P at all. This suggests that this system explored much of the sequence space available to this genetic system and that GACTZP libraries are richer reservoirs of functionality than standard libraries.


Asunto(s)
ADN/química , ADN/síntesis química , ADN/genética , Biblioteca de Genes , Células Hep G2 , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa
18.
J Virol Methods ; 214: 60-74, 2015 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25680538

RESUMEN

Mosquito-borne arboviruses are emerging world-wide as important human and animal pathogens. This makes assays for their accurate and rapid identification essential for public health, epidemiological, ecological studies. Over the past decade, many mono- and multiplexed assays targeting arboviruses nucleic acids have been reported. None has become established for the routine identification of multiple viruses in a "single tube" setting. With increasing multiplexing, the detection of viral RNAs is complicated by noise, false positives and negatives. In this study, an assay was developed that avoids these problems by combining two new kinds of nucleic acids emerging from the field of synthetic biology. The first is a "self-avoiding molecular recognition system" (SAMRS), which enables high levels of multiplexing. The second is an "artificially expanded genetic information system" (AEGIS), which enables clean PCR amplification in nested PCR formats. A conversion technology was used to place AEGIS component into amplicon, improving their efficiency of hybridization on Luminex beads. When Luminex "liquid microarrays" are exploited for downstream detection, this combination supports single-tube PCR amplification assays that can identify 22 mosquito-borne RNA viruses from the genera Flavivirus, Alphavirus, Orthobunyavirus. The assay differentiates between closely-related viruses, as dengue, West Nile, Japanese encephalitis, and the California serological group. The performance and the sensitivity of the assay were evaluated with dengue viruses and infected mosquitoes; as few as 6-10 dengue virions can be detected in a single mosquito.


Asunto(s)
Arbovirus/aislamiento & purificación , Culicidae/virología , Ensayos Analíticos de Alto Rendimiento/métodos , Hibridación de Ácido Nucleico/métodos , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa/métodos , Biología Sintética/métodos , Animales , Arbovirus/genética , Femenino , Sensibilidad y Especificidad
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(4): 1449-54, 2014 Jan 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24379378

RESUMEN

Artificially expanded genetic information systems (AEGISs) are unnatural forms of DNA that increase the number of independently replicating nucleotide building blocks. To do this, AEGIS pairs are joined by different arrangements of hydrogen bond donor and acceptor groups, all while retaining their Watson-Crick geometries. We report here a unique case where AEGIS DNA has been used to execute a systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) experiment. This AEGIS-SELEX was designed to create AEGIS oligonucleotides that bind to a line of breast cancer cells. AEGIS-SELEX delivered an AEGIS aptamer (ZAP-2012) built from six different kinds of nucleotides (the standard G, A, C, and T, and the AEGIS nonstandard P and Z nucleotides, the last having a nitro functionality not found in standard DNA). ZAP-2012 has a dissociation constant of 30 nM against these cells. The affinity is diminished or lost when Z or P (or both) is replaced by standard nucleotides and compares well with affinities of standard GACT aptamers selected against cell lines using standard SELEX. The success of AEGIS-SELEX relies on various innovations, including (i) the ability to synthesize GACTZP libraries, (ii) polymerases that PCR amplify GACTZP DNA with little loss of the AEGIS nonstandard nucleotides, and (iii) technologies to deep sequence GACTZP DNA survivors. These results take the next step toward expanding the power and utility of SELEX and offer an AEGIS-SELEX that could possibly generate receptors, ligands, and catalysts having sequence diversities nearer to that displayed by proteins.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Información , Selección Genética , Secuencia de Bases , Cartilla de ADN , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa , Técnica SELEX de Producción de Aptámeros
20.
Anal Chem ; 85(9): 4705-12, 2013 May 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23541235

RESUMEN

Methods to detect DNA and RNA (collectively xNA) are easily plagued by noise, false positives, and false negatives, especially with increasing levels of multiplexing in complex assay mixtures. Here, we describe assay architectures that mitigate these problems by converting standard xNA analyte sequences into sequences that incorporate nonstandard nucleotides (Z and P). Z and P are extra DNA building blocks that form tight nonstandard base pairs without cross-binding to natural oligonucleotides containing G, A, C, and T (GACT). The resulting improvements are assessed in an assay that inverts the standard Luminex xTAG architecture, placing a biotin on a primer (rather than on a triphosphate). This primer is extended on the target to create a standard GACT extension product that is captured by a CTGA oligonucleotide attached to a Luminex bead. By using conversion, a polymerase incorporates dZTP opposite template dG in the absence of dCTP. This creates a Z-containing extension product that is captured by a bead-bound oligonucleotide containing P, which binds selectively to Z. The assay with conversion produces higher signals than the assay without conversion, possibly because the Z/P pair is stronger than the C/G pair. These architectures improve the ability of the Luminex instruments to detect xNA analytes, producing higher signals without the possibility of competition from any natural oligonucleotides, even in complex biological samples.


Asunto(s)
Ácidos Nucleicos/genética , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , Análisis de Secuencia de ARN , Humanos , Conformación de Ácido Nucleico , Ácidos Nucleicos/química , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...