(DNA-based) cell targeting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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(DNA-based) cell targeting

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Bad: If we can control amount of aptamer bound to cell surface, probably can get as much/ better control by delivering protein bound directly to the aptamer. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: (DNA-based) cell targeting


1
(DNA-based) cell targeting
2
Overview
  • Goals
  • 3 designs
  • Possible Implementation
  • Future directions

3
Goal (what we want)
  • Control of substrate delivery to a cell.
  • What substrates? Proteins, sugars, DNA
    nanostructures.
  • What kind of control? Amount that gets to the
    cell surface, amount relative to other proteins
    targeted to cell.
  • Potentially important application in drug
    delivery, nanostructures.

4
Design options
C
A
B
5
A Aptamer-based
  • Good
  • Its simple.
  • Its been done before with success.
  • Bad
  • Requires design of different aptamer sequences
    that can bind to cell-surface protein.

2 associations
6
B Biotin/Streptavidin
  • Good
  • Depends on association b/w biotin and
    streptavidin.
  • Able to swap in and out target proteins.
  • Bad
  • Depends on association b/w biotin-streptavidin
    interaction
  • Ugly
  • Complexity
  • Expressing streptavidin on cell surface using
    OmpX
  • Nevertheless, proof of principle!

4 associations
7
C DNA-base pairing
  • Good
  • Control of relative amounts of protein that bind
    cell

3 associations
8
Control of relative amounts?
  • DNA bound cell surface
  • ATCATC
  • Sequence conjugated to substrate A TAGTAG
  • Sequence conjugated to substrate B TAG
  • Substrate A binds less often but for longer
    periods of time.
  • Precise control of kinetics based on types of
    base-pairs used repeated patterns.

9
C DNA-base pairing
  • Good
  • Control of relative amounts of protein that bind
    cell.
  • Bad
  • If we can control amount of aptamer bound to cell
    surface, probably can get as much/ better control
    by delivering protein bound directly to the
    aptamer.

3 associations
10
Implementation of B
  • Part 1 Making E. coli express streptavidin on
    cell surface (which would be interesting by
    itself). See Rice, et al.
  • Challenges Is this even possible?
  • Assay Test for fluorescently labeled biotin-DNA
    binding to cell surface.
  • Might attempt to evolve proteins that can do
    this.
  • Time consuming!! Might start knowing that we
    wouldnt finish.
  • Part 2 Conjugate a protein to biotinylated DNA
    (can do in parallel)
  • Part 3 Testing
  • More fluorescently labeled DNA

11
Implementation of B
  • Part 1 Infinite time for 3 people working on
    streptavidin fusion protein
  • Part 2 in parallel 4 weeks for 2 people to
    work on substrate synthesis

12
Implementation of C
  • Part 0 Figure out if its worth it.
  • Part 1 Find and test aptamer that binds
    cell-surface protein
  • Literature search
  • Assay use fluorescently labeled aptamer
  • Part 2 Conjugate a protein to single stranded
    DNA.
  • Part 3 Testing
  • Fluorescently labeled DNA again!
  • Part 4 Determining DNA annealing properties and
    whether proteins can simply be swapped with
    predictable behavior.

13
Implementation of C
  • Part 1 One week for literature search, one week
    for testing, 2 people.
  • Part 2 In parallel Four weeks for two people
    to conjugate a protein to single stranded DNA.
  • Part 3 One week for 2 people.
  • Part 4 Potentially a week based on faculty
    answers testing is Parts 1-3 multiplied

14
Major Questions
  • What cell-surface protein(s) to target? What
    substrate do we want to use?
  • Eventual application?
  • Practicality?
  • Can we really hope to express Streptavidin on a
    cell surface in a summer?
  • How does this fit into iGEM?
  • Where are we going with this?

15
Future directions
  • Use aptamers to trigger signaling cascades finer
    control of gene expression.
  • Create a dock for a DNA nanostructure
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