Abstract
Synthetic genetic polymers (xeno-nucleic acids, XNAs) have the potential to transition aptamers from laboratory tools to therapeutic agents, but additional functionality is needed to compete with antibodies. Here, we describe the evolution of a biologically stable artificial genetic system composed of α-l-threofuranosyl nucleic acid (TNA) that facilitates the production of backbone- and base-modified aptamers termed “threomers” that function as high quality protein capture reagents. Threomers were discovered against two prototypical protein targets implicated in human diseases through a combination ofin vitroselection and next-generation sequencing using uracil nucleotides that are uniformly equipped with aromatic side chains commonly found in the paratope of antibody-antigen crystal structures. Kinetic measurements reveal that the side chain modifications are critical for generating threomers with slow off-rate binding kinetics. These findings expand the chemical space of evolvable non-natural genetic systems to include functional groups that enhance protein target binding by mimicking the structural properties of traditional antibodies.
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McCloskey, C. M., Li, Q., Yik, E. J., Chim, N., Ngor, A. K., Medina, E., … Chaput, J. C. (2021). Evolution of Functionally Enhanced α-l-Threofuranosyl Nucleic Acid Aptamers. ACS Synthetic Biology, 10(11), 3190–3199. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.1c00481
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