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Chenlan Shen

Sichuan University

Publishes on Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, Biosensors and Analytical Detection, Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research. 25 papers and 325 citations.

25Publications
325Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Toehold-Exchange-Based Activation of Aptamer Switches Enables High Thermal Robustness and Programmability
Guan A. Wang, Xinghong Wu, Fangfang Chen et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2023
Cited by 44

Aptamer switches are attractive nature-inspired tools for developing smart materials and nanodevices. However, the thermal robustness and programmability of current aptamer switches are often limited by their activation processes that are coupled with high reaction enthalpy. Here, we present an enthalpy-independent activation approach that harnesses toehold-exchange as a general framework to design aptamer switches. We demonstrate mathematically and experimentally that this approach is highly effective in improving thermal robustness and thus leads to better analytical performances of aptamer switches. Enhanced programmability is also demonstrated through fine-grained and dynamic tuning of effective affinities and dynamic ranges, as well as the construction of a synthetic DNA network that resembled biological signaling cascades. Our study not only enriches the current toolbox for engineering and controlling synthetic molecular switches but also offers new insights into their thermodynamic basis, which is critical for diverse synthetic biological designs and applications.

Mismatch-Guided Deoxyribonucleic Acid Assembly Enables Ultrasensitive and Multiplex Detection of Low-Allele-Fraction Variants in Clinical Samples
Dan Huang, Hui Deng, Juan Zhou et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2023
Cited by 41

Somatic mutations are important signatures in clinical cancer treatment. However, accurate detection of rare somatic mutations with low variant-allele frequencies (VAFs) in clinical samples is challenging because of the interference caused by high concentrations of wild-type (WT) sequences. Here, we report a post amplification SNV-specific DNA assembly (PANDA) technology that eliminates the high concentration pressure caused by WT through a mismatch-guided DNA assembly and enables the ultrasensitive detection of cancer mutations with VAFs as low as 0.1%. Because it generates an assembly product that only exposes a single-stranded domain with the minimal length for signal readout and thus eliminates possible interferences from secondary structures and cross-interactions among sequences, PANDA is highly versatile and expandable for multiplex testing. With ultrahigh sensitivity, PANDA enabled the quantitative analysis of EGFR mutations in cell-free DNA of 68 clinical plasma samples and four pleuroperitoneal fluid samples, with test results highly consistent with NGS deep sequencing. Compared to digital PCR, PANDA returned fewer false negatives and ambiguous cases of clinical tests. Meanwhile, it also offers much lower upfront instrumental and operational costs. The multiplexity was demonstrated by developing a 3-plex PANDA for the simultaneous analysis of three EGFR mutations in 54 pairs of tumor and the adjacent noncancerous tissue samples collected from lung cancer patients. Because of the ultrahigh sensitivity, multiplexity, and simplicity, we anticipate that PANDA will find wide applications for analyzing clinically important rare mutations in diverse devastating diseases.

CRNDE enhances the expression of MCM5 and proliferation in acute myeloid leukemia KG-1a cells by sponging miR-136-5p
Chen Liu, Liang Zhong, Chenlan Shen et al.|Scientific Reports|2021
Cited by 26Open Access

The long-noncoding RNA colorectal neoplasia differentially expressed (CRNDE) gene has been considered to be crucial in tumor malignancy. Although CRNDE is highly expressed in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), its mechanism of action remains unknown. In this study, GEPIA and qRT-PCR were performed to confirm the expression of CRNDE in AML samples and cell lines, respectively. CRNDE shRNA vectors were transfected to explore the biological functions of CRNDE. The cell proliferation was assessed by the CCK8 assay, while apoptosis and cell cycle distribution were measured by flow cytometry and Western blotting. The results showed that CRNDE was overexpressed in both AML samples and cell lines. CRNDE silencing inhibited proliferation and increased apoptotic rate and cell cycle arrest of KG-1a cells. The luciferase reporter assay coupled with RIP assay revealed that CRNDE act as a ceRNA. Rescue assays demonstrated that the effects of CRNDE silencing could be reversed by miR-136-5p inhibitors. In conclusion, our results expound that the CRNDE/miR-136-5p/MCM5 axis modulates cell progression and provide a new regulatory network of CRNDE in KG-1a cells.