scispace - formally typeset
A

Andrew D. Ellington

Researcher at University of Texas at Austin

Publications -  599
Citations -  48723

Andrew D. Ellington is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aptamer & RNA. The author has an hindex of 96, co-authored 569 publications receiving 43262 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew D. Ellington include Harvard University & UPRRP College of Natural Sciences.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Making Security Viral: Shifting Engineering Biology Culture and Publishing.

TL;DR: Considerations are described and suggestions for enhancing security in the publication of synthetic biology research and techniques to build and support a safe and secure research enterprise that is able to maximize its positive impacts and minimize any negative outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progress Report on the Generation of Polyfunctional Microscale Particles for Programmed Self-Assembly.

TL;DR: The progress in establishing the unit processes required and the successful fabrication and sequence-specific self-assembly of covalent ssDNA-functionalized parallelepipeds with dimensions in the sub 10 μm regime characterized by optical microscopy and imaging flow cytometry are reported.
Posted ContentDOI

Portable nucleic acid tests for rapid detection of monkeypox virus

Sanchita Bhadra, +1 more
- 10 Aug 2022 - 
TL;DR: Two isothermal nucleic acid amplification assays for detection of monkeypox virus (MPXV) clades 2 and 3 that include the strains responsible for the current global outbreak ofmonkeypox are reported, which could readily detect single digit copies of MPXV synthetic double stranded DNA templates within 30 min.
Patent

Allosterically regulated ribozymes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used regulatable aptazymes in assays to detect the presence of ligands or to detect activation of an aptazyme by an effector.
Reference EntryDOI

UNIT 9.5 In Vitro Selection of RNA Aptamers to a Small Molecule Target

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the selection of aptamers from a single-stranded RNA pool that bind to small molecule targets and two modes of selection, one by column filtration and one by batch selection.