Part:BBa_K3714000
Gardiquimod biosensor 337
The template of a new self-cleaving aptazyme[1], which keeps itself intact with gardiquimod present, and catalyzes the self-cleavage reaction in the absence of gardiquimod. This part could be used as a switch for gene expression controlled by gardiquimod. The feature "Aptazyme" is necessary, and two A-rich oligonucleotides are added at both terminal to avoid unwanted secondary structure.
Usage and Biology
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]
This aptazyme was found in a random oligonucleotide library designed based on ribozyme sTRSV. The two loops of native sTRSV were replaced by two random sequences, which might form an aptamer domain, affecting the activity of ribozyme. We intended to use this aptazyme to validate our design of an colloidal gold based detection platform. So we tested its activity in advance(Fig.1).
The cleave fraction of each lane was determined by ImageJ. The aptazyme showed a percentage of 77% cleaved without gardiquimod and 14% cleaved with 300μM gardiquimod. This performance is slightly different from the efficiency mentioned in literature[1], we contributed this difference to technical bias during measuring cleave fraction with PAGE. After validation, we engineered the A-rich sequences to two probes named BBa_K3714002.
Reference
[1] Townshend, B., Xiang, J. S., Manzanarez, G., Hayden, E. J. & Smolke, C. D. A multiplexed, automated evolution pipeline enables scalable discovery and characterization of biosensors. Nature Communications 12, 1437, doi:10.1038/s41467-021-21716-0 (2021).
efficiency | 10 μM gardiquimod inhibits 94.4% cleavage[1] |