Conventional approaches to small-molecule screening are currently being challenged by the availability of vast amounts of genomic sequence information and a plethora of potential targets. This challenge has precipitated a need for new screening paradigms that emphasize simplicity, capacity, and para
Small-Molecule Screening Made Simple for a Difficult Target with a Signaling Nucleic Acid Aptamer that Reports on Deaminase Activity
โ Scribed by Nadine H. Elowe; Razvan Nutiu; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Jonathan D. Cechetto; Donald W. Hughes; Yingfu Li; Eric D. Brown
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 401 KB
- Volume
- 118
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0044-8249
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โฆ Synopsis
Conventional approaches to small-molecule screening are currently being challenged by the availability of vast amounts of genomic sequence information and a plethora of potential targets. This challenge has precipitated a need for new screening paradigms that emphasize simplicity, capacity, and parallelization. Herein we report the application of signaling DNA-aptamer technology for the development and execution of a high-throughput screen for an otherwise problematic target, adenosine deaminase (ADA). The approach employed a signaling DNA aptamer that reports on adenosine concentration over the course of the enzymatic reaction. The assay was extremely robust in a screen of more than 44 000 molecules and revealed a new competitive inhibitor of the deaminase. Nucleic acid aptamers have proven worthy as a routinely selectable species for a wide variety of small molecules and so this proof-of-principle work has broad
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