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Author

Craig Tuerk

Other affiliations: OSI Pharmaceuticals
Bio: Craig Tuerk is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nucleic acid & Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 30 publications receiving 11169 citations. Previous affiliations of Craig Tuerk include OSI Pharmaceuticals.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
03 Aug 1990-Science
TL;DR: High-affinity nucleic acid ligands for a protein were isolated by a procedure that depends on alternate cycles of ligand selection from pools of variant sequences and amplification of the bound species.
Abstract: High-affinity nucleic acid ligands for a protein were isolated by a procedure that depends on alternate cycles of ligand selection from pools of variant sequences and amplification of the bound species. Multiple rounds exponentially enrich the population for the highest affinity species that can be clonally isolated and characterized. In particular one eight-base region of an RNA that interacts with the T4 DNA polymerase was chosen and randomized. Two different sequences were selected by this procedure from the calculated pool of 65,536 species. One is the wild-type sequence found in the bacteriophage mRNA; one is varied from wild type at four positions. The binding constants of these two RNA's to T4 DNA polymerase are equivalent. These protocols with minimal modification can yield high-affinity ligands for any protein that binds nucleic acids as part of its function; high-affinity ligands could conceivably be developed for any target molecule.

9,367 citations

Patent
17 Aug 1992
TL;DR: The SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment) method as discussed by the authors was proposed for the identification of nucleic acid ligands, where a candidate mixture of single stranded nucleic acids having regions of randomized sequence is contacted with a target compound and those nucleic amino acids having an increased affinity to the target are partitioned from the remainder of the candidate mixture.
Abstract: The SELEX (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential Enrichment) method is disclosed for the identification of nucleic acid ligands A candidate mixture of single stranded nucleic acids having regions of randomized sequence is contacted with a target compound and those nucleic acids having an increased affinity to the target are partitioned from the remainder of the candidate mixture The partitioned nucleic acids are amplified to yield a ligand enriched mixture

797 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that at least one of the ligands inhibits cDNA synthesis by HIV reverse transcriptase but fails to inhibit other reverse transcriptases, highlighting the power of SELEX to yield highly specific ligands that reduce the activity of target proteins.
Abstract: High-affinity ligands of the reverse transcriptase of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) were isolated by the SELEX procedure (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) from RNA populations randomized at 32 positions. Analysis of these ligands revealed a pseudoknot consensus with primary sequence bias at some positions. We demonstrated that at least one of the ligands inhibits cDNA synthesis by HIV reverse transcriptase but fails to inhibit other reverse transcriptases. These experiments highlight the power of SELEX to yield highly specific ligands that reduce the activity of target proteins. Such ligands may provide therapeutic reagents for viral and other diseases.

479 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Thermal denaturation studies of model hairpins show that the loop sequence UUCG dramatically stabilizes RNA hairpins when compared to a control sequence, suggesting that T4 has utilized this loop sequence to optimize the stability of intercistronic hairpins.
Abstract: The mRNA of bacteriophage T4 contains a strikingly abundant intercistronic hairpin. Within the 55 kilobases of known T4 sequence, the hexanucleotide sequence CTTCGG is found 13 times in the DNA strand equivalent to mRNA sequences. In 12 of those occurrences, the sequence is flanked by inverted repeats predictive of RNA hairpins with UUCG in the loop. Avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase, which can traverse hairpins of larger calculated stability, terminates efficiently at these CUUCGG hairpins. Thermal denaturation studies of model hairpins show that the loop sequence UUCG dramatically stabilizes RNA hairpins when compared to a control sequence. These data, when combined with previously described parameters of helix stability, suggest that T4 has utilized this loop sequence to optimize the stability of intercistronic hairpins. The stability of CUUCGG hairpins is also utilized in the RNAs of many organisms besides T4.

317 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study uses mathematical analysis and computer simulation to predict which variations have the greatest impact and to develop strategies and guidelines for enhanced effectiveness in processes for systematic enrichment of DNA, RNA or peptide ligands.

250 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
03 Aug 1990-Science
TL;DR: High-affinity nucleic acid ligands for a protein were isolated by a procedure that depends on alternate cycles of ligand selection from pools of variant sequences and amplification of the bound species.
Abstract: High-affinity nucleic acid ligands for a protein were isolated by a procedure that depends on alternate cycles of ligand selection from pools of variant sequences and amplification of the bound species. Multiple rounds exponentially enrich the population for the highest affinity species that can be clonally isolated and characterized. In particular one eight-base region of an RNA that interacts with the T4 DNA polymerase was chosen and randomized. Two different sequences were selected by this procedure from the calculated pool of 65,536 species. One is the wild-type sequence found in the bacteriophage mRNA; one is varied from wild type at four positions. The binding constants of these two RNA's to T4 DNA polymerase are equivalent. These protocols with minimal modification can yield high-affinity ligands for any protein that binds nucleic acids as part of its function; high-affinity ligands could conceivably be developed for any target molecule.

9,367 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An improved dynamic programming algorithm is reported for RNA secondary structure prediction by free energy minimization and experimental constraints, derived from enzymatic and flavin mononucleotide cleavage, improve the accuracy of structure predictions.

3,774 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Feb 1991-Science
TL;DR: High-density arrays formed by light-directed synthesis are potentially rich sources of chemical diversity for discovering new ligands that bind to biological receptors and for elucidating principles governing molecular interactions.
Abstract: Solid-phase chemistry, photolabile protecting groups, and photolithography have been combined to achieve light-directed, spatially addressable parallel chemical synthesis to yield a highly diverse set of chemical products. Binary masking, one of many possible combinatorial synthesis strategies, yields 2n compounds in n chemical steps. An array of 1024 peptides was synthesized in ten steps, and its interaction with a monoclonal antibody was assayed by epifluorescence microscopy. High-density arrays formed by light-directed synthesis are potentially rich sources of chemical diversity for discovering new ligands that bind to biological receptors and for elucidating principles governing molecular interactions. The generality of this approach is illustrated by the light-directed synthesis of a dinucleotide. Spatially directed synthesis of complex compounds could also be used for microfabrication of devices.

3,351 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 Aug 1994-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported here that selected mutants had a minimum inhibitory concentration of 640 μg ml-1, a 32,000-fold increase and 64-fold greater than any published TEM-1 derived enzyme.
Abstract: DNA SHUFFLING is a method for in vitro homologous recombination of pools of selected mutant genes by random fragmentation and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) reassembly1. Computer simulations called genetic algorithms2–4have demonstrated the importance of iterative homologous recombination for sequence evolution. Oligonucleotide cassette mutagenesis5–11 and error-prone PCR12,13 are not combinatorial and thus are limited in searching sequence space1,14. We have tested mutagenic DNA shuffling for molecular evolution14–18 in a p-lactamase model system9,19. Three cycles of shuffling and two cycles of backcrossing with wild-type DNA, to eliminate non-essential mutations, were each followed by selection on increasing concentrations of the antibiotic cefotaxime. We report here that selected mutants had a minimum inhibitory concentration of 640 μg ml-1, a 32,000-fold increase and 64-fold greater than any published TEM-1 derived enzyme. Cassette mutagenesis and error-prone PCR resulted in only a 16-fold increase9.

2,512 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
06 Feb 1992-Nature
TL;DR: The isolation of single-stranded DNA aptamers to the protease thrombin of the blood coagulation cascade is described and binding affinities in the range 25–200 nM are reported.
Abstract: Aptamers are double-stranded DNA or single-stranded RNA molecules that bind specific molecular targets. Large randomly generated populations can be enriched in aptamers by in vitro selection and polymerase chain reaction. But so far single-stranded DNA has not been investigated for aptamer properties, nor has a target protein been considered that does not interact physiologically with nucleic acid. Here we describe the isolation of single-stranded DNA aptamers to the protease thrombin of the blood coagulation cascade and report binding affinities in the range 25-200 nM. Sequence data from 32 thrombin aptamers, selected from a pool of DNA containing 60 nucleotides of random sequence, displayed a highly conserved 14-17-base region. Several of these aptamers at nanomolar concentrations inhibited thrombin-catalysed fibrin-clot formation in vitro using either purified fibrinogen or human plasma.

2,358 citations