| Berkeley,
CA - December 21, 2004 - Researchers at The Molecular
Sciences Institute revealed means for sensitive detection
and precise quantification of arbitrarily designated
molecules. The work is published in the current issue
of Nature Methods.
The Cover Article, entitled
"Using protein-DNA chimeras to detect and count
small numbers of molecules," describes "tadpole"
molecules, and their use to detect and count small
numbers of proteins and other molecules.
Detection and quantification
methods based on these molecules have exquisite sensitivity,
immense dynamic range, and unprecedented quantitative
precision. These attributes should make the molecules
useful for applications from diagnosis and assessment
of human disease, to environmental monitoring, to
detection of pathogens during an emerging infectious
disease or a deliberate biological attack.
Methods based on these molecules
are designed to work with the existing infrastructure
of PCR machines, which are widely deployed and found
most county public health departments in the United
States.
According to Dr. Roger Brent,
MSI Director and senior member of the team, "We
called the molecules tadpoles because they consist
of a protein head coupled to a DNA tail. The head
binds the specific target molecule, while the DNA
tail lets us count the number of target molecules."
Dr. Ian Burbulis, a researcher
at MSI, devised the tadpole molecules and is the first
author of the paper. According to Dr. Burbulis, "If
you want to understand the mechanistic operation of
biological systems, you need to know the precise numbers
of each component part found in individual cells.
Tadpoles and methods based on them should make that
possible."
To count molecules so precisely,
the researchers resorted to statistical methods sometimes
used in high energy physics. The improved statistical
techniques may be useful in other applications, such
as management of therapy for HIV.
The work is funded by MSI's
Alpha Project, its flagship effort to predict the
future behavior of a prototype cellular system. The
Alpha project is funded by the National Institutes
of Health's National Human Genome Research Institute.
In 2002, NHGRI named MSI a "Center of Excellence
in Genomic Science," an acknowledgement of MSI's
past and future research contributions in the field.
"This invention is almost
a textbook example of how research into fundamental
biology can spin off applications that might impact
human health and safety in fairly short order,"
said Dr. Brent.
The invention is also described
in an accompanying Nature Methods "News and Views"
article by Stanford researcher Dr. Garry Nolan, who
wrote that tadpoles may be an "appealing system
for researchers wanting a standardized, high-throughput,
and accurate detection system for... just about anything."
The Molecular Sciences Institute
is an independent nonprofit research laboratory that
combines genomic experimentation with computer modeling.
Work at MSI aims to weave biology together with physics,
engineering, computer science, and mathematics to
enable precise, quantitative, prediction of the future
behaviors of biological systems.
Nature Methods is a first-tier
journal for new methods and significant improvements
in life sciences and chemistry.
About the MSI
The Molecular Sciences Institute
is an independent nonprofit research laboratory that
combines genomic experimentation with computer modeling.
The MSI mission is to predict the behavior of cells
and organisms in response to defined genetic and environmental
changes. Progress toward this goal will significantly
increase our understanding of biological systems and
help catalyze radical changes in how diseases are
understood and treated. Moreover, by enabling a more
predictive biological understanding, work at MSI should
enable a design-based engineering of biological systems
and thus help bring about improvements in agriculture
and in the environment.
Link : www.http://www.molsci.org
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