Abstract
Biological in vitro selection techniques, such as RNA aptamer methods and mRNA display, have proven to be powerful approaches for engineering molecules with novel functions. These techniques are based on iterative amplification of biopolymer libraries, interposed by selection for a desired functional property. Rare, promising compounds are enriched over multiple generations of a constantly replicating molecular population, and subsequently identified. The restriction of such methods to DNA, RNA, and polypeptides precludes their use for small-molecule discovery. To overcome this limitation, we have directed the synthesis of combinatorial chemistry libraries with DNA “genes,” making possible iterative amplification of a nonbiological molecular species. By differential hybridization during the course of a traditional split-and-pool combinatorial synthesis, the DNA sequence of each gene is read out and translated into a unique small-molecule structure. This “chemical translation” provides practical access to synthetic compound populations 1 million-fold more complex than state-of-the-art combinatorial libraries. We carried out an in vitro selection experiment (iterated chemical translation, selection, and amplification) on a library of 106 nonnatural peptides. The library converged over three generations to a high-affinity protein ligand. The ability to genetically encode diverse classes of synthetic transformations enables the in vitro selection and potential evolution of an essentially limitless collection of compound families, opening new avenues to drug discovery, catalyst design, and the development of a materials science “biology.”
Highlights
Creation of molecular function represents a fundamental challenge
Small-molecule libraries are synthesized by the split-and-pool method which is illustrated in Figure 2 (Furka et al 1991; Thompson and Ellman 1996)
If a support could predetermine its own trajectory, it would encode the synthesis of the small molecule attached to it
Summary
Creation of molecular function represents a fundamental challenge. Nature accomplishes the task through evolution, iterating cycles of selection, amplification, and diversification. Over the last two decades, technologies that recapitulate this process in the test tube have been developed, and have produced an amazing collection of biopolymers with unprecedented recognition and catalytic properties (reviewed in Roberts and Ja 1999) At present, these in vitro selection techniques cannot be applied to compounds of nonbiological origin and have not affected most areas of molecular discovery. Amplification and iteration are critical for identifying vanishingly small amounts of material from a complex population These processes make possible the application of bulk selections rather than serial screens to assay libraries, vastly increasing throughput. In this manuscript we present and demonstrate a general method for the in vitro selection and evolution of combinatorial chemistry libraries (Harbury and Halpin 2000)
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