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Review
. 2023 Jul 21;12(7):1874-1888.
doi: 10.1021/acssynbio.3c00043. Epub 2023 Jun 14.

Construction and Applications of Mammalian Cell-Based DNA-Encoded Peptide/Protein Libraries

Affiliations
Review

Construction and Applications of Mammalian Cell-Based DNA-Encoded Peptide/Protein Libraries

Yi Wang et al. ACS Synth Biol. .

Abstract

DNA-encoded peptide/protein libraries are the starting point for protein evolutionary modification and functional peptide/antibody selection. Different display technologies, protein directed evolution, and deep mutational scanning (DMS) experiments employ DNA-encoded libraries to provide sequence variations for downstream affinity- or function-based selections. Mammalian cells promise the inherent post-translational modification and near-to-natural conformation of exogenously expressed mammalian proteins and thus are the best platform for studying transmembrane proteins or human disease-related proteins. However, due to the current technical bottlenecks of constructing mammalian cell-based large size DNA-encoded libraries, the advantages of mammalian cells as screening platforms have not been fully exploited. In this review, we summarize the current efforts in constructing DNA-encoded libraries in mammalian cells and the existing applications of these libraries in different fields.

Keywords: DNA-encoded peptide/protein libraries; display technologies; mammalian cells; transmembrane proteins.

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