Rapid SELEX Monitoring System and Dengue Virus Biosensor breakthrough
- admin
- 2024-09-06
- 190
· Prof. Taek Lee (Department of Chemical Engineering) and His Research Team,
Professor Taek Lee’s Research Team
(Department of Chemical Engineering) has Established a Rapid SELEX Monitoring
System and Developed a Dengue Virus Biosensor Using This Technology
- Developed a step-by-step monitoring method for rapid
SELEX monitoring -
- Demonstrating the feasibility of biosensors created by
applying rapid SELEX monitoring method -
- Published in the internationally renowned Chemical
Engineering Journal (IF: 13.3, JCR: 3.8%) -
Moonbong
Jang and Hanbin Park, MSc students, along with Hyunjoon Park, a PhD student
from Prof. Taek Lee's research team in the Department of Chemical Engineering,
served as co-first authors in establishing an electrochemical SELEX monitoring
system using the ACEF technique. They also developed a dengue virus biosensing
platform using the aptamers created through this method.
Aptamers,
which are composed of single-stranded DNA or RNA molecules, are gaining
traction as a rival to antibodies due to their high specificity for specific
molecules. Although antibodies and aptamers are
similarly used in that they can both recognize specific molecules, aptamers are
being utilized as an attractive alternative to antibodies due to their several
unique advantages. For small molecules with low
immunogenicity, antibody design can be complicated and expensive, but aptamers
are easy to make. Additionally, aptamers offer the
convenience of being synthesized through in vitro processes without the need
for animal or cell testing, and their structural stability ensures they are
less prone to denaturation at specific temperatures, making them suitable for
use as stable bioprobes. Therefore, they are solidifying their role
in the fields of diagnostics, therapeutics, food safety, and environmental
monitoring.
However,
despite the potential of aptamers, the process of generating aptamers, the
systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) process, is
time-consuming, costly, and labor-intensive. SELEX is a cyclical process, requiring
multiple stages of the same process, each of which is essentially accompanied
by monitoring. Conventional monitoring methods typically
involve labeling released DNA with specific markers such as fluorescent dyes,
radioactive isotopes, or enzymes, or using electrophoresis. However, these
methods face challenges due to the time required for target binding or the
time-consuming nature of complex labeling procedures.
In
response, Prof. Taek Lee’s research team from the Department of Chemical
Engineering applied an electrochemical SELEX monitoring technique that
incorporated ACEF technology to rapidly produce aptamers. Using this technique,
they developed dengue virus biosensor, through which they validated the
performance of the aptamers created by the method. The aptamer solutions at each stage were
combined with the target material, dengue virus, and the signal changes were
monitored by the SWV technique and monitored as signal changes due to changes
in binding capacity. From the 9th round onwards, it was
confirmed that there were no signal fluctuations, and this round was selected
as the optimal condition. The binding time with the target was
shortened using ACEF. ACEF generates an electric field in the
solution on the electrode surface, creating a local temperature gradient, which
induces microconvection in the fluid and enhances the binding events. Thus, the complex procedures involved in
the monitoring stage were reduced to less than 10 minutes. The aptamers created through this process
were applied to a dengue virus biosensor to evaluate their performance. The sensor demonstrated high selectivity
by not binding to other biomolecules or viruses, and it showed a sensitive
detection limit of 59.7 fM in a triple-distilled water dilution solution. This demonstrated an improved detection
capability compared to the previously developed dengue virus aptamer, which had
a detection limit of 76.7 fM. Additionally, the detection limit in 5%
human serum was confirmed to be 37.0 fM, and in blind tests, it showed high
reproducibility with low error rates of 3.49%, 4.33%, and 2.66%, respectively. Therefore, the rapid SELEX monitoring
technique proposed by the research team effectively reduced the workload of
developers by utilizing ACEF technology. Additionally, the proposed platform, which
successfully developed DENV aptamers, demonstrated its potential applicability
to various biosensing systems and proved that it could be expanded for use in
commercial technologies and applications.
Meanwhile, this research was
supported by the Korea Environment Industry & Technology Institute (KEITI,
2020003030001) through the Aquatic Ecosystem Health Management Program of the
Ministry of Environment (MOE), the Industrial Core Technology Development
Program (20009121) of the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE), and
the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF, 2021R1C1C1005583). The research
results were published in the internationally renowned journal in the field of
chemical engineering, Chemical Engineering Journal (IF: 13.3, JIF ranking:
96.2%), under the title ‘Establishment of the rapid electrochemical-SELEX
monitoring system by using ACEF technique and its application to dengue virus
aptasensor fabrication’ (Reference: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2024.154806).
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