National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Development and characterization of light-producing deoxyribozymes
Švehlová, Kateřina ; Curtis, Edward Arthur (advisor) ; Höbartner, Claudia (referee) ; Renčiuk, Daniel (referee)
Light-producing protein enzymes such as luciferase play important roles in both applied and basic research. In this study, we used an in vitro selection to isolate deoxyribozymes that catalyze a chemiluminescent reaction by dephosphorylation of the commercial substrate CDP-Star. One of the most active variants, named Supernova, was further improved and characterized using a combination of random mutagenesis, in vitro reselection, high-throughput sequencing, comparative sequence analysis, and optimization of reaction conditions. Supernova produces light up to 6,500-fold more efficiently that the background reaction and folds into an unusual triple-helical structure. Moreover, we characterized in detail the buffer requirements including pH, the effect of various ions, substrate and Supernova concentrations, and the presence of crowding agents. Finally, we showed that Supernova can be turned into an allosteric sensor by rational design. We anticipate that this deoxyribozyme can be used as the signaling component in light-producing allosteric deoxyribozyme sensors that respond to a wide variety of stimuli and will complement existing methods that utilize radioactive, fluorescent, and colorimetric readouts.
Study of Synthetic Oligonacleotides Containing Guanine by Voltammetry on a Graphite Electrode
Hejduková, M. ; Špaček, Jan ; Fojta, Miroslav ; Havran, L. ; Renciuk, D.
Electrochemical oxidation of specifically designed DNA hexamers containing guanine has been studied in aqueous acetate buffet (pH 5) at a pyrolytic graphite electrode (PGE) by linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) Influence of the oligonucleotide composition and concentration was investigated It seems that short oligonucleotides containing guanine produce oxidation signals. which are sensitive to their structural properties Simple electrochemical techniques us may be useful tool for monitoring of structural changes of DNA.

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