What is Live Cell SELEX? Traditional SELEX uses purified target proteins. Live Cell SELEX uses intact, living cells in their native state. This is crucial because: It selects for aptamers that bind to targets in their natural conformation and post-translational modifications (e.g., glycosylation). It inherently selects for cell-specificity (e.g., cancer cell vs. healthy cell) without needing to know the exact molecular target upfront. It can discover aptamers against unknown or membrane-bound targets that are difficult to purify. Core Workflow of a Typical Service A full-service provider will manage the entire pipeline: 1. Project Design & Consultation Target Cell Line Definition: Defining the "positive" cell line (e.g., patient-derived cancer cells, activated immune cells). Counter-Selection Strategy: Choosing the "negative" cell line(s) (e.g., healthy counterpart, isogenic control) to eliminate non-specific binders. Library Design: Recommending or customizing the starting random oligonucleotide library (length, modifications like 2'-F pyrimidines for RNA aptamers for stability). 2. The Selection Phase (The Iterative SELEX Cycles) Incubation: The random library is incubated with the counter-selection cells. Unbound/non-specific sequences are collected. Positive Selection: The pre-cleared library is incubated with the target cells. Cells are washed stringently. Recovery: Cell-bound aptamers are recovered (e.g., by cell lysis, heat elution, or protease treatment). Amplification: Recovered sequences are amplified by PCR (for DNA) or RT-PCR (for…