Part:BBa_K2289003
STX Aptazyme J_4
Notice: Functional DNA
This part is a sequence of a functional ssDNA. It is only active as single-stranded DNA. It can not be cloned into a plasmid. For use order it as a DNA oligo.
This part is an Aptazyme, a noncoding single-stranded DNA molecule that combines 3 modules, an aptamer for the recognition of Saxitoxin (related to the red tide), a HRP-mimicking DNAzyme as a reporter for the presence of the toxin, and linkers that conect both domains (Aptamer and DNAzyme).
Aptazyme
Aptazyme is a ssDNA molecule that can recognize a ligand and catalyze a reaction. The funcionality of this molecule depends on three modules; an aptamer, for the recognition of a ligand, a DNAzyme, htat catalize a reaction and linkers, fundamental parts that can be complementary to specific zones of the Aptazyme, sequestring the catalytic zone of the molecule. The linkers are eseential, because they are placed in such a way that when the aptamer is not interacting with the ligand, the linkers are capturing the DNAzyme and altering the conformation of the DNAzyme (see Figure 1A).
When the aptamer interacts with the ligand, a conformational change takes place in the molecule, this conformational change promotes the movement of the linkers from the original place, and consequently the DNAzyme is released. Then, the DNAzyme can structure the catalytic conformation and catalyze the reaction (see Figure 1B).
This part (BBa_K2289003) consists on an Aptazyme that can recognise Saxitoxin (STX) and that can catalyse a chromogenic reaction with HRP-like enzymatic activity.
Modules
- STX M30f Aptamer (Part:BBa_K2289004):
It is an aptamer for saxitoxin, developed by Zheng et. al. 2015, this aptamer was selected by apool of aptamers. It has a dissociation constant (Kd) of 0.133 µM. The aptamer's secondary structure is on Figure 2A.
- HRP-Mimicking DNAzyme (Part:BBa_K1614007):
It is a DNAzyme developed by Travascio et. al. 1998. This DNAzyme, just as its name says, imitates the horseradish peroxidase catalytic activity, using hydrogen peroxide as a substrate and a reducing agent, it has been demonstrated that works well with a chromogenic reactant, ABTS. This DNAzyme needs Hemin to act as a catalyst, and when adopts a G-cuadruplex conformation allows the formation of a complex with Hemin, that, at the same time enables the DNAzyme to catalyse the reaction (see Figure 2B).
- J_4 linkers:
These are linkers generated by the JAWS software developed by Team Heidelberg 2015. Each linker binds to a specific zone of the molecule, allowing the inactive conformation of the Aptazyme. Those were calculated by the software to allow both conformations of the Aptazyme, the inactive one, and the active in the presence of the ligand. According to the software analysis, the DNAzyme with J_4 linkers has an inactive free energy of -12.87 Kcal/mol, and an active free energy of -6.32 Kcal/mol, with a free energy difference of 6.55 Kcal/mol.
All in one
- Inactive fold: Inactive fold: We expect that the molecule folding in the absence of the toxin is the same as predicted by the
[http://rna.tbi.univie.ac.at/cgi-bin/RNAWebSuite/RNAfold.cgi RNAfold WebServer] (see Figure 3A), this prediction comes with a minimum free energy of -20.70 Kcal/mol. You may notice that the structure in the figure does not emulate well the kiddnaping system described above, this happens exclusively in this molecule, we decided to recalculate that in another server, [http://unafold.rna.albany.edu/?q=mfold/DNA-Folding-Form mfold WebServer], just to be sure that the structure was well predicted. The mfold WebServer structure prediction results were similar to the predicted structure by RNAfold WebServer
- In the presence of the toxin: The expected conformation of the Aptazyme is on Figure 3B, we expect that when the toxin is present, the aptamer adopts
other conformation so the J_4 linkers can move releasing the DNAzyme just as described above.
Kinetics
- Conditions: In order to evaluate the kinetics of our parts, we determined the amounts of each reactive present in the reaction, see table I
concentrations.
For more information about the methods used for these experiments, please visit [http://2017.igem.org/Team:UChile_Biotec/Experiments Protocols] in the Experiments section of our Wiki.
- Results:
The experiments with this Aptazyme were done, but we could not have signifficant information about it. Anyway if you want so see the results related with this aptazyme you may go to [http://2017.igem.org/Team:UChile_Biotec/Results Results] section in our [http://2017.igem.org/Team:UChile_Biotec Wiki].
Sequence and Features
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
References
X. Zheng, B. Hu, SX. Gao, D.J. Liu, M.J. Sun, B.H. Jiao, L.H. Wang. (2015). A saxitoxin-binding aptamer whith higher affinity and inhibitory activity optimized by rational site-directed mutagenesis and truncation. Toxicon 101. 41-47.
P. Travascio, Y. Li, D. Sen. (1998). DNA-enghanced peroxidase activity of a DNA-aptamer-hemin complex. Chemistry and Biology, Vol 5 No 9. 505-517.
C. Teller, C Shimnron, I. Willner. (2009). Aptamer-DNAzyme Hairpins for Amplified Biosensing. Anal. Chem., 81. 9114-9119.
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