Publication | Closed Access
Inhibition of the In Vitro Replication of DNA by an Aptamer–Protein Complex in an Autonomous DNA Machine
71
Citations
28
References
2009
Year
Nucleic Acid ChemistryAptamer–protein ComplexVitro ReplicationNatural SciencesAutonomous Dna MachineNucleic Acid BiochemistryOligonucleotideMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationNucleic Acid Amplification TestAntithrombin Aptamer SequenceNucleic Acid AmplificationDna ComputingDna Replication TemplateNucleic Acid BiomarkersBiomolecular Engineering
DNA replication plays a central role in living organisms. Unregulated or uncontrollable DNA replication is well known to result in many pathological states, such as cancer, autoimmune diseases, and viral/bacterial infections. We report that an aptamer-protein complex could indirectly inhibit in vitro replication of DNA. An isothermal DNA machine based on the strand-displacement amplification is employed to support our assumption. An antithrombin aptamer sequence is rationally encoded into the DNA replication template. Once thrombin binds to the template, the as-formed aptamer-protein complexes can, in turn, become a barrier to the polymerase and inhibit the DNA replication activities in both static and dynamic modes. The inhibition is successfully confirmed by both fluorescence and gel-electrophoresis experiments. Considering the availability of a broad library of aptamers and the existence of various DNA/protein interactions, our results imply the possibility for the rational regulation of DNA replication in vivo.
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