Reprint

Oligonucleotide, Therapy, and Applications

Edited by
February 2022
123 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3057-4 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-3056-7 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Oligonucleotide, Therapy, and Applications that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Medicine & Pharmacology
Summary

Oligonucleotides (ON) constitute a new group of molecular agents, the object of significant interest due to their potential value as drugs for diagnostic and therapeutic applications. Their special interest derives from the intrinsic characteristics of ONs: a) ONs are informative agents, a property that derives from the order in which the nucleotides of each particular ON are arranged; b) ONs can act as ligands (ASO, TFO, aptamers, G-quadruplex, etc.) of complementary nucleic acid sequences (DNA or RNA) due to their high capacity to hybridize (by means of Watson and Crick or Hoogsteen links) with other nucleotide sequences, resulting in specific gene modulatory effects. However, nonspecific sequences may also be of interest, as is the case with repetitive nucleotide sequences (CpG) with adjuvant effects of vaccines; c) ONs can also rapidly evolve to achieve specific advantages of utility (targeting, stability, efficacy, toxicity, etc.) or high-sensitivity diagnostic technology (markers, analyzes, biosensors, FISH, microarrays, etc.), by chemical modification of nucleotides in any of their atoms. These properties show that ONs are first-order molecules due to their potential usefulness in practice.In this collection of research articles and review papers, we aim to highlight their therapeutic, but also diagnostic and technological utility as drugs.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
quantum dots (QDs); DNAzyme; ROS; Amplex Red; light-induced activity; DNA methylation; histone code; microRNA; nanoparticles; noncoding RNA; pulmonary arterial hypertension; aptamer; aptasensor; influenza; nanoparticles; SERS; virus detection; α-synuclein; antisense oligonucleotide; dopamine neurotransmission; double mutant A30P*A53T*; motor deficits; Parkinson’s disease; transgenic mouse model; G-quadruplexes; covalent dimer construct; anti-proliferative activity; primary cell culture of human glioma; antisensense oligonucleotide; Foxp3; regulatory T cells; vaccine immunogenicity; Sporothrix schenckii; Marfan syndrome; fibrillin-1; antisense oligonucleotides; exon skipping; splice-switching