“High-throughput aptamer screening” is a method used to rapidly identify aptamers—short single-stranded DNA or RNA molecules—that can bind specifically to a target molecule, such as a protein, small molecule, or even whole cells. Let’s break this down in detail: 1. What Are Aptamers? Aptamers are oligonucleotides (DNA or RNA) that fold into specific three-dimensional shapes allowing them to bind with high affinity and specificity to their targets. They function similarly to antibodies but are synthetic, smaller, more stable, and can be chemically modified. 2. High-Throughput Screening (HTS) in Aptamer Discovery Traditional aptamer discovery uses SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment), which involves multiple iterative rounds of binding, separation, and amplification. High-throughput aptamer screening accelerates this process by using automation and large-scale technologies to simultaneously test thousands to millions of sequences against the target. 3. Key Techniques in High-Throughput Aptamer Screening Microarray-Based Screening Thousands of aptamer candidates are immobilized on a chip. The target (protein, small molecule, or cell) is fluorescently labeled and applied. Aptamers that bind the target emit signals detected by imaging. Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS)-Coupled SELEX After each SELEX round, sequences are analyzed via NGS. Sequence enrichment patterns reveal high-affinity aptamer candidates without the need for extensive…
What is Filter Membrane Binding SELEX? SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment) is the standard method for discovering high-affinity, specific nucleic acid aptamers. The Filter Membrane Binding variant is one of the most classic and robust SELEX techniques. Core Principle: It leverages a nitrocellulose or mixed cellulose ester filter membrane, which irreversibly binds proteins and other macromolecules but allows short, unbound single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides to pass through. The Selection Mechanism: During each selection round, the target molecule (e.g., a protein) is immobilized on the filter. An immense library of random oligonucleotides (10^13 - 10^15 unique sequences) is applied. Only sequences that bind to the target are retained on the filter with it. Unbound sequences are washed away. The bound aptamer candidates are then eluted, amplified by PCR (or RT-PCR for RNA), and used as the enriched library for the next round. Key Features of the Service A professional service will typically offer: Target Flexibility: Optimal for purified proteins (recombinant or native), protein complexes, viruses, and even some small molecules if conjugated to a carrier protein. Counter-SELEX: A critical step to ensure specificity. The enriched library is passed through a filter bound to non-target molecules (e.g., related proteins, cell lysates, immobilization matrix) to subtract cross-reactive binders. High-Throughput…
What is a Stem Cell Aptamer Screening Service? It is a contract research service where a specialized lab uses Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment (SELEX) to discover and develop DNA or RNA aptamers that bind with high affinity and specificity to a target of your choice related to stem cells. Aptamers are often called "chemical antibodies." They are short, single-stranded oligonucleotides that fold into unique 3D shapes, allowing them to bind to targets like proteins, small molecules, or even whole cells. Core Targets for Stem Cell Applications The service can be tailored to screen for aptamers against: Specific Cell Surface Markers: (e.g., CD34, CD133, SSEA-4, TRA-1-60) for identification and isolation. Whole Live Stem Cells: To get aptamers that recognize the unique molecular signature of a specific stem cell type (e.g., mesenchymal stem cells, cancer stem cells, pluripotent stem cells). Differentiation State-Specific Targets: To distinguish between pluripotent, progenitor, and fully differentiated cells. Specific Stem Cell-Derived Products: (e.g., exosomes, vesicles). Typical Workflow of the Service A professional service provider will guide you through these stages: Phase Description Your Input 1. Project Design Defining the target (specific protein, cell line, primary cells), counter-selection cells (to ensure specificity), and desired aptamer properties (e.g., Kd, nuclease resistance). Provide target cells, control cells, and…
What is an Antibody Aptamer Screening Service? It is a specialized contract research service where a biotechnology company uses SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment) or advanced variations of it to discover and develop aptamers that bind with high affinity and specificity to a target antibody. Antibody: A large, Y-shaped protein produced by the immune system to identify and neutralize pathogens. Aptamer: A short, single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotide (or a modified derivative) that folds into a specific 3D structure, enabling it to bind to a target molecule with antibody-like specificity. Often called "chemical antibodies." The goal of the service is to provide clients with synthetic, recombinant-like binding molecules as alternatives or complements to traditional monoclonal antibodies. Why Screen for Aptamers Against Antibodies? Aptamers offer distinct advantages, making them attractive for various applications: Anti-Drug Antibody (ADA) Detection: Develop aptamer-based assays to detect and quantify ADAs in clinical trials for biotherapeutics. Diagnostic Tools: Create aptamer sensors (aptasensors) to detect specific antibody biomarkers for diseases (e.g., autoantibodies in autoimmune disorders). Therapeutic Neutralization: Discover aptamers that can bind and neutralize pathological antibodies (e.g., in autoimmune diseases like lupus or myasthenia gravis). Purification & Pull-Down: Use aptamers as ligands in chromatography or in assays to capture and isolate specific antibodies from complex…
What is an Aptamer? First, a quick definition: Aptamers are short, single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides that bind to a specific target molecule (like proteins, toxins, cells) with high affinity and specificity. They are often called "chemical antibodies" but offer advantages like easier synthesis, higher stability, and lower cost. What is Toxin-Targeted Aptamer Screening? This service involves the in vitro selection and development of custom aptamers designed to bind specifically to a toxic substance. The core technology is called SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment). The process screens vast random libraries (10^14 - 10^15 different sequences) against the toxin to isolate the few sequences that bind tightly and specifically. Key Steps in the Service Pipeline Project Consultation & Target Definition: Clarify the toxin (e.g., mycotoxins like Aflatoxin B1, marine toxins like Saxitoxin, bacterial toxins like Botulinum, environmental toxins like heavy metals). Define the desired application (Detection/Biosensing, Neutralization, Capture/Purification). Specify the sample matrix (food extract, blood serum, environmental water). Library Design & SELEX Strategy: Design of a naive single-stranded DNA or RNA library. Choosing the appropriate SELEX variant: Negative Selection/Counter-SELEX: To exclude sequences that bind to similar non-toxin molecules or the assay matrix (crucial for specificity). Capture-SELEX: For small toxins that can't be immobilized. Cell-SELEX: If the…
Aptamer Screening via HT-SELEX (High-Throughput Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment) is the modern, powerful method for discovering aptamers. Let's break down what this service entails, its process, advantages, and key considerations. What is an Aptamer? First, a quick reminder: Aptamers are single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides that bind to a specific target molecule (proteins, small molecules, cells, viruses) with high affinity and specificity, analogous to antibodies. They are often called "chemical antibodies." What is HT-SELEX? Traditional SELEX is iterative and low-throughput. HT-SELEX supercharges this process by integrating: Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS): To analyze the entire aptamer pool at each round. Advanced Bioinformatics: To identify binding motifs and track enrichment. Automation: Using robotics for partitioning (e.g., magnetic beads, microfluidics) to increase throughput and reproducibility. This results in a faster, more efficient, and data-driven screening process. Standard HT-SELEX Service Workflow A typical service provider will follow these steps: 1. Project Design & Library Synthesis Target Preparation: You provide the target (recombinant protein, small molecule conjugate, whole cell, etc.). Its purity and stability are critical. Library Design: A randomized oligonucleotide library is synthesized (typically 10^14 - 10^15 unique sequences). Libraries can be DNA, RNA, or modified nucleotides (e.g., SOMAmers) for enhanced stability and affinity. 2. The Selection Rounds (Cycles of…
Core Concept of NGS-SELEX Traditional SELEX uses a few rounds of selection and cloning/Sanger sequencing of a handful of clones. NGS-SELEX performs deep sequencing (millions to billions of reads) at every selection round. This allows you to: Track the entire evolution of the oligonucleotide pool in real-time. Identify enriched sequences and families early. Perform sophisticated bioinformatics analysis to find winners, not just rely on final round abundance. Dramatically reduce the number of selection rounds needed (often 3-6 rounds instead of 8-15). Standard Service Workflow A full-service provider would typically offer the following pipeline: 1. Project Design & Library Synthesis Consultation: Target properties (protein, small molecule, cell), desired aptamer properties (Kd, specificity, buffer conditions). Library Design: Standard (40-60 nt random region) or custom (doped libraries, modified nucleotides like 2'-F, 2'-OMe, SOMAmers). Primer & Library Synthesis: Providing the initial, highly diverse DNA or RNA library (10^14 - 10^15 unique sequences). 2. SELEX Selection Immobilization: Immobilizing the target (on beads, column, plate) or using solution-based techniques (capture-SELEX, toggle-SELEX). Counter-Selection: Including steps to remove binders to immobilization matrix or off-targets. Stringency Control: Increasing selection pressure over rounds (e.g., reduced target concentration, increased wash stringency). Amplification: Careful PCR (with optimization to minimize bias) to regenerate the pool for the next round. 3. NGS & Core Bioinformatics Sample Preparation: Preparing sequencing…
What is Counter-SELEX? First, a quick recap of SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment): SELEX is an iterative process to isolate specific DNA or RNA aptamers from a vast random library (10^14 - 10^15 sequences) that bind tightly to a target molecule (e.g., a protein, small molecule, cell). Counter-SELEX is a powerful refinement to this process. Its core purpose is to improve specificity by negative selection. How it works: During or between rounds of positive selection (binding to the desired target), the oligonucleotide pool is exposed to one or more counter-targets. The Goal: Sequences that bind to these counter-targets are deliberately removed or depleted from the pool. Only sequences that bind specifically to the desired target and not to the closely related counter-targets are carried forward. Common Counter-Targets: Structural analogs: For a small-molecule drug, you might use its inactive metabolite or a similar drug from the same class. Protein isoforms or family members: To develop an aptamer for a specific kinase, you'd use other kinases from the same family as counter-targets. Immobilization matrix: If the target is immobilized on beads, pre-incubating the library with "blank" beads removes matrix binders. Related cell types: For a cell-specific aptamer (e.g., cancer vs. healthy), the healthy cells are used as the counter-target. What Does a…
Toggle-SELEX is a sophisticated and powerful variant of the traditional SELEX process for aptamer development, specifically designed to generate aptamers that recognize multiple, closely related targets or a specific epitope common across different species/conditions. Let's break down what an Aptamer Screening Service using Toggle-SELEX entails, its applications, and what you should consider when selecting a service provider. What is Toggle-SELEX? The core idea of Toggle-SELEX is to "toggle" or alternate the selection pressure between two (or more) related target molecules during the SELEX rounds. Traditional SELEX: Uses a single target to evolve aptamers with high affinity for that specific target. It often negatively selects against related molecules (counter-selection) to ensure specificity. Toggle-SELEX: Actively uses two positive selection targets in an alternating pattern. For example: Round 1: Select against Target A (e.g., human protein). Round 2: Select against Target B (e.g., mouse ortholog of the same protein). Round 3: Back to Target A, and so on. Counter-selection against unrelated structures is still used to maintain general specificity. This process enriches for nucleic acid sequences that bind to a conserved structural epitope present on both targets, while sequences that bind to unique epitopes on only one target are filtered out. Key Applications of Toggle-SELEX This method is invaluable when you need cross-reactive or broad-spectrum recognition: Cross-Species Reactive Aptamers: Develop aptamers for preclinical research. For example, an…
1. Core Concept: What is Capture-SELEX? Capture-SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment) is an advanced selection technique used to discover single-stranded DNA or RNA aptamers that bind to a specific target molecule. The key innovation is that the target molecule is immobilized (or "captured") on a solid support via a short, known oligonucleotide sequence that is part of the initial random library. This makes it exceptionally powerful for selecting aptamers against small molecules or targets without natural immobilization sites. 2. The Key Differentiator: How It Differs from Classical SELEX Classical SELEX: The target itself is immobilized directly on a surface (e.g., a bead or plate). This can sometimes lead to aptamers that bind to the surface or the immobilized region of the target, which may not function well in solution. Capture-SELEX: The library itself is immobilized via a complementary "capture sequence." Only sequences that bind to the free, unmodified target in solution undergo a conformational change that releases them from the capture strand for collection. 3. Step-by-Step Process of a Capture-SELEX Service A service provider will typically manage this entire pipeline: Step 1: Project Design & Library Synthesis You define the target (e.g., a small molecule, protein, cell). The service designs a custom single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) library: [5' Fixed Primer Sequence - RANDOM Region…