4.8 Article

Aptamer Switches Regulated by Post-Transition/Transition Metal Ions

Journal

ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION
Volume 60, Issue 22, Pages 12346-12350

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202102254

Keywords

aptamer; fluorescence anisotropy; metal ion; molecular target; structural switch

Funding

  1. NeuroCoG [ANR-15-IDEX-02]
  2. Labex Arcane [ANR-17-EURE-0003]
  3. Polynat Carnot Institute [ANR-11-CARN-007-01]

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This study introduced an aptamer switch design that relies on transition metal ions to trigger DNA destabilization, which was applied for small organics detection. The DNA form changes when metal ions coordinate with nucleobases, achieving a simple DNA switching process.
We introduced an aptamer switch design that relies on the ability of post-transition/transition metal ions to trigger, through their coordination to nucleobases, substantial DNA destabilization. In the absence of molecular target, the addition of one such metal ion to usual aptamer working solutions promotes the formation of an alternative, inert DNA state. Upon exposure to the cognate compound, the equilibrium is shifted towards the competent DNA form. The switching process was preferentially activated by metal ions of intermediate base over phosphate complexation preference (i.e. Pb2+, Cd2+) and operated with diversely structured DNA molecules. This very simple aptamer switch scheme was applied to the detection of small organics using the fluorescence anisotropy readout mode. We envision that the approach could be adapted to a variety of signalling methods that report on changes in the surface charge density of DNA receptors.

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