toggle SELEX
Info Center
  • Aptamer Screening Service-NGS-SELEX

    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…

    2026-01-10
  • Aptamer Screening Service-Toggle-SELEX

    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…

    2026-01-09
  • X-Aptamer Screening Services

    What is an Aptamer? First, a quick reminder: Aptamers are short, single-stranded DNA or RNA oligonucleotides that bind to a specific target with high affinity and specificity. They are often called "chemical antibodies." The Core Service: SELEX (The Screening Process) The service revolves around executing a SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment) campaign. This is an iterative, in-vitro combinatorial chemistry process that screens a vast random library (10^14 - 10^15 unique sequences) to find the few that bind your target. A standard SELEX workflow includes: Library Design & Synthesis: Creating the initial random oligonucleotide pool. Incubation: The library is exposed to the target. Partitioning: Bound sequences are separated from unbound ones (the most critical step, varying by target type). Amplification: The bound sequences are amplified (usually by PCR for DNA, RT-PCR for RNA). Counter-Selection (Negative Selection): To increase specificity, the pool is exposed to non-target surfaces (e.g., immobilization matrix, related proteins) to remove non-specific binders. Repetition: Steps 2-5 are repeated for 8-15 rounds until a high-affinity pool is enriched. Cloning & Sequencing: The final pool is cloned, and individual aptamer sequences are identified via Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS). Bioinformatics & Analysis: NGS data is analyzed to identify candidate sequences, often clustered into families based on sequence/structure motifs. Characterization: Top candidates…

    2026-01-07