Abstract

The complexity of genetic circuits has not seen a significant increase over the last decades, even with the rapid development of synthetic biology tools. One of the bottlenecks is the limited number of orthogonal transcription factor-operator pairs. Researchers have tried to use aptamer-ligand pairs as genetic parts to regulate transcription. However, most aptamers selected using traditional methods cannot be directly applied in gene circuits for transcriptional regulation. To that end, we report a new method called CIVT-SELEX to select DNA aptamers that can not only bind to macromolecule ligands but also undergo significant conformational changes, thus affecting transcription. The single-stranded DNA library with affinity to our example ligand human thrombin protein is first selected and enriched. Then, these ssDNAs are inserted into a genetic circuit and tested in the in vitro transcription screening to obtain the ones with significant inhibitory effects on downstream gene transcription when thrombins are present. These aptamer-thrombin pairs can inhibit the transcription of downstream genes, demonstrating the feasibility and robustness of their use as genetic parts in both linear DNAs and plasmids. We believe that this method can be applied to select aptamers of any target ligands and vastly expand the genetic part library for transcriptional regulation.

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