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  • Whole Cell-SELEX Aptamer Screening Service

    What is Whole Cell-SELEX? SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment) is a technique used to develop aptamers—single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides that bind to a specific target molecule with high affinity and specificity, akin to antibodies. Whole Cell-SELEX is a variant where the target is not a purified protein, but an entire living cell. This is crucial for discovering aptamers against: Native cell-surface proteins in their natural conformation and modification state. Complex membrane protein complexes. Disease-specific cell markers (e.g., on cancer cells, pathogens) without prior knowledge of the specific molecular target. Specific cell types in a heterogeneous mixture (e.g., cancer stem cells within a tumor). A service provider performs this technically demanding and iterative process on behalf of researchers or companies. The Core Process of a Whole Cell-SELEX Service A typical service workflow involves close collaboration with the client: 1. Project Design & Consultation Defining Targets: Client specifies the positive selection cell (e.g., human glioblastoma cells) and the critical negative/counter selection cell (e.g., normal astrocytes or a related cell line). This is key to generating selective aptamers. Library Design: The service provider uses a vast (10^14 - 10^15 sequences) random oligonucleotide library. 2. The SELEX Cycle (Iterative Rounds) This is the core experimental phase performed by the service provider: Incubation: The library is incubated…

    2026-01-15