DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics

Nucleic acids are a uniquely flexible and multi-faceted class of molecules that fulfill fundamental and defining tasks such as replication and determination of heritable characteristics in every living organism. From the microscopic to the gigantic, from the most primitive to the most complex, life...

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Main Author: Codrea, Vlad Alexandru
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
DNA
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21494
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-214942015-09-20T17:16:01ZDNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeuticsCodrea, Vlad AlexandruTuberculosisInfluenzaDNANucleic acid circuitsG-quadruplexNucleic acids are a uniquely flexible and multi-faceted class of molecules that fulfill fundamental and defining tasks such as replication and determination of heritable characteristics in every living organism. From the microscopic to the gigantic, from the most primitive to the most complex, life has been both molded and served by nucleic acids. Nucleic acid circuits straddle the realm of nature and technology. The elegance of interaction between nucleic acid molecules invites us to gain a deeper understanding of the naturally occurring systems they compose and to apply our ingenuity and foresight toward developing ever more complex synthetic systems. Nature has provided these basic building blocks, which we can now arrange – and augment – for the purpose of creating molecular-level machinery. Here we describe some ways in which we have rationally harnessed nucleic acids. In preparation for outbreaks of novel and deadly avian influenza viruses, we used quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to track the number of flu virus particles surviving in the presence of potential antiviral drugs. We engineered tunable on/off switches that can be used to evaluate a series of conditions for diagnostic applications or to enable ‘smart’ drugs that sense, analyze, and respond to their microenvironment. We optimized the conditions for, and used, a unique set of guanine-rich DNA sequences called G-quadruplexes, whose enzymatic and structural properties make them prime effector candidates in diagnostic platforms. G-quadruplex folding powers isothermal DNA amplification, and the small organic molecules they bind endow G-quadruplexes with expanded catalytic abilities. We genotyped drug resistance mutations in tuberculosis via visually detectable color changes in the reaction buffer. We developed a paper fluidics assay that employs soluble and bead-immobilized nucleic acids to scan for genes in tuberculosis, and upon detection, to generate a readily observable discoloration on the paper strip. Finally, we probed the boundary of nucleic acid circuitry by attempting to expand its language via the incorporation of unnatural nucleobases into oligonucleotide components of a catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA) circuit. We subsequently evaluated the resilience of the unnatural CHA circuit to contamination by random DNA species, such as may be encountered in clinical samples.text2013-10-08T17:41:45Z2013-082013-08-16August 20132013-10-08T17:41:45Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/21494en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Tuberculosis
Influenza
DNA
Nucleic acid circuits
G-quadruplex
spellingShingle Tuberculosis
Influenza
DNA
Nucleic acid circuits
G-quadruplex
Codrea, Vlad Alexandru
DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
description Nucleic acids are a uniquely flexible and multi-faceted class of molecules that fulfill fundamental and defining tasks such as replication and determination of heritable characteristics in every living organism. From the microscopic to the gigantic, from the most primitive to the most complex, life has been both molded and served by nucleic acids. Nucleic acid circuits straddle the realm of nature and technology. The elegance of interaction between nucleic acid molecules invites us to gain a deeper understanding of the naturally occurring systems they compose and to apply our ingenuity and foresight toward developing ever more complex synthetic systems. Nature has provided these basic building blocks, which we can now arrange – and augment – for the purpose of creating molecular-level machinery. Here we describe some ways in which we have rationally harnessed nucleic acids. In preparation for outbreaks of novel and deadly avian influenza viruses, we used quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to track the number of flu virus particles surviving in the presence of potential antiviral drugs. We engineered tunable on/off switches that can be used to evaluate a series of conditions for diagnostic applications or to enable ‘smart’ drugs that sense, analyze, and respond to their microenvironment. We optimized the conditions for, and used, a unique set of guanine-rich DNA sequences called G-quadruplexes, whose enzymatic and structural properties make them prime effector candidates in diagnostic platforms. G-quadruplex folding powers isothermal DNA amplification, and the small organic molecules they bind endow G-quadruplexes with expanded catalytic abilities. We genotyped drug resistance mutations in tuberculosis via visually detectable color changes in the reaction buffer. We developed a paper fluidics assay that employs soluble and bead-immobilized nucleic acids to scan for genes in tuberculosis, and upon detection, to generate a readily observable discoloration on the paper strip. Finally, we probed the boundary of nucleic acid circuitry by attempting to expand its language via the incorporation of unnatural nucleobases into oligonucleotide components of a catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA) circuit. We subsequently evaluated the resilience of the unnatural CHA circuit to contamination by random DNA species, such as may be encountered in clinical samples. === text
author Codrea, Vlad Alexandru
author_facet Codrea, Vlad Alexandru
author_sort Codrea, Vlad Alexandru
title DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
title_short DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
title_full DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
title_fullStr DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
title_full_unstemmed DNA-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
title_sort dna-based molecular circuits for diagnostics and therapeutics
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21494
work_keys_str_mv AT codreavladalexandru dnabasedmolecularcircuitsfordiagnosticsandtherapeutics
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