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      Development of DNA aptamers using Cell-SELEX.

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          Abstract

          In the past two decades, high-affinity nucleic acid aptamers have been developed for a wide variety of pure molecules and complex systems such as live cells. Conceptually, aptamers are developed by an evolutionary process, whereby, as selection progresses, sequences with a certain conformation capable of binding to the target of interest emerge and dominate the pool. This protocol, cell-SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment), is a method that can generate DNA aptamers that can bind specifically to a cell type of interest. Commonly, a cancer cell line is used as the target to generate aptamers that can differentiate that cell type from other cancers or normal cells. A single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) library pool is incubated with the target cells. Nonbinding sequences are washed off and bound sequences are recovered from the cells by heating cell-DNA complexes at 95 degrees C, followed by centrifugation. The recovered pool is incubated with the control cell line to filter out the sequences that bind to common molecules on both the target and the control, leading to the enrichment of specific binders to the target. Binding sequences are amplified by PCR using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled sense and biotin-labeled antisense primers. This is followed by removal of antisense strands to generate an ssDNA pool for subsequent rounds of selection. The enrichment of the selected pools is monitored by flow cytometry binding assays, with selected pools having increased fluorescence compared with the unselected DNA library. The procedure, from design of oligonucleotides to enrichment of the selected pools, takes approximately 3 months.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Protoc
          Nature protocols
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1750-2799
          1750-2799
          Jun 2010
          : 5
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Center for Research at Bio/Nano Interface, Department of Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
          Article
          nprot.2010.66
          10.1038/nprot.2010.66
          20539292
          9c012200-d16b-453e-a4a1-90834b5ea017
          History

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