Protein-Protein Communication Mediated by an Antibody-Responsive DNA Nanodevice
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We report here the rational design and optimization of an antibody-responsive, DNA-based device that enables communication between pairs of otherwise non-interacting proteins. The device is designed to recognize and bind a specific antibody and, in response, undergo a conformational change that leads to the release of a DNA strand, termed the "translator," that regulates the activity of a downstream target protein. As proof of principle, we demonstrate antibody-induced control of the proteins thrombin and Taq DNA polymerase. The resulting strategy is versatile and, in principle, can be easily adapted to control protein-protein communication in artificial regulatory networks.
Erasable and Field Programmable DNA Circuits Based on Configurable Logic Blocks.
Liu Y, Zhai Y, Hu H, Liao Y, Liu H, Liu X Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024; 11(26):e2400011.
PMID: 38698560 PMC: 11234411. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202400011.