Fusobacterium nucleatum has been correlated to many poor human conditions including oral infections, adverse pregnancies and cancer, and thus molecular tools capable of detecting this human pathogen can be used to develop diagnostic tests for them. Using a new selection method targeting thermally stable proteins without a counter-selection step, we derived an fluorogenic RNA-cleaving DNAzyme, named RFD-FN1, that can be activated by a thermally stable protein target that is unique to F. nucleatum subspecies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular recognition elements with high specificity are of great importance for the study of molecular interactions, accurate diagnostics, drug design, and personalized medicine. Herein, a highly specific DNA aptamer for RNase H2 from () was generated by SELEX and minimized to 40 nucleotides. The aptamer exhibits a dissociation constant () of 1.
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