Comprehensive profiling of the ligand binding landscapes of duplexed aptamer families reveals widespread induced fit.
Jeffrey D MunzarAndy NgDavid JunckerPublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Duplexed aptamers (DAs) are ligand-responsive constructs engineered by hybridizing an aptamer with an aptamer-complementary element (ACE, e.g., a DNA oligonucleotide). Although DAs are commonly deployed, the binding dynamics of ternary ACE-aptamer-ligand systems remain underexplored, having been conventionally described by a conformational selection framework. Here we introduce aptamer-complementary element scanning (ACE-Scan) as a method to generate comprehensive hybridization, spontaneous off-rate, and induced fit ligand-binding landscapes for entire DA families. ACE-Scan reveals induced fit in DAs engineered from small molecule- and protein-binding DNA and RNA aptamers, as well as DAs engineered from the natural add riboswitch aptamer. To validate ACE-Scan, we engineer solution-phase ATP-specific DAs from 5 ACEs with varying spontaneous and induced fit off-rates, generating aptasensors with 8-fold differences in dynamic range consistent with ACE-Scan. This work demonstrates that ACE-Scan can readily map induced fit in DAs, empowering aptamers in biosensing, synthetic biology, and DNA nanomachines.
Keyphrases
- gold nanoparticles
- high glucose
- computed tomography
- disease activity
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- diabetic rats
- angiotensin ii
- small molecule
- sensitive detection
- label free
- drug induced
- nucleic acid
- rheumatoid arthritis
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- molecular dynamics
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- high resolution
- magnetic nanoparticles
- circulating tumor
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- cell free
- quantum dots