What is Protein SELEX? SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment) is an iterative, in vitro process used to discover aptamers—single-stranded DNA or RNA molecules that bind to a specific target (like a protein) with high affinity and specificity. Protein SELEX specifically refers to using a purified protein as the target to isolate aptamers against it. These aptamers are often called "chemical antibodies" due to their similar binding function. Core Workflow of a Protein SELEX Service A professional service will manage this entire complex process, typically involving the following stages: 1. Project Design & Consultation Target Characterization: Discussing the target protein's properties (size, purity, stability, domains, post-translational modifications). Selection Strategy: Choosing the right SELEX variant (e.g., Nitrocellulose filter, Magnetic bead, Capillary Electrophoresis, or Cell-SELEX for membrane proteins). Defining counter-selection steps to avoid binders to unwanted tags or impurities. Library Design: Using a standard or custom random oligonucleotide library (e.g., 40-60 random nucleotides flanked by primer sites). 2. The SELEX Cycle (Repeated 8-15 Rounds) mermaid graph TD A[Start: ssDNA/RNA Library<br>~10^15 unique sequences] --> B{Incubation with<br>Target Protein}; B --> C[Partition: Separate<br>Bound from Unbound Sequences]; C --> D[Elution: Recover<br>Bound Sequences]; D --> E[Amplification:<br>PCR (DNA) or RT-PCR (RNA)]; E --> F[Purification:<br>Regenerate ssDNA/RNA for next round]; F --> G{Enrichment<br>Sufficient?}; G -- No…
What are Aptamers? Aptamers are short, single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides (typically 20-80 nucleotides) that fold into specific three-dimensional shapes, enabling them to bind to target molecules with high affinity and specificity. They are often called "chemical antibodies." The process of creating them is called SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment), which iteratively selects aptamers from vast random-sequence libraries against a desired target (e.g., a protein, small molecule, or even a whole cell). Key Advantages of Aptamers as Therapeutics Compared to traditional protein-based biologics like antibodies, aptamers offer several compelling benefits: High Specificity & Affinity: Can distinguish between closely related targets (e.g., different protein isoforms). Small Size: Typically 8-25 kDa, much smaller than antibodies (~150 kDa). This can improve tissue penetration. Full Chemical Synthesis: Produced in vitro via chemical synthesis, eliminating batch-to-batch variability and the need for biological systems (cells or animals). This makes manufacturing scalable and consistent. Low Immunogenicity: Being nucleic acids, they are generally less likely to trigger immune reactions than foreign proteins. Excellent Stability: DNA aptamers, in particular, are thermally stable and can be stored easily. Stability in biological fluids can be engineered. Ease of Modification: Can be chemically modified to enhance stability (e.g., resist nucleases), prolong half-life (e.g., PEGylation), or add functional groups…