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Dive into the research topics where Michelle Byrom is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle Byrom.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Inhibition of Cell Proliferation by an Anti-EGFR Aptamer

Na Li; Hong Hanh Nguyen; Michelle Byrom; Andrew D. Ellington

Aptamers continue to receive interest as potential therapeutic agents for the treatment of diseases, including cancer. In order to determine whether aptamers might eventually prove to be as useful as other clinical biopolymers, such as antibodies, we selected aptamers against an important clinical target, human epidermal growth factor receptor (hEGFR). The initial selection yielded only a single clone that could bind to hEGFR, but further mutation and optimization yielded a family of tight-binding aptamers. One of the selected aptamers, E07, bound tightly to the wild-type receptor (Kd = 2.4 nM). This aptamer can compete with EGF for binding, binds to a novel epitope on EGFR, and also binds a deletion mutant, EGFRvIII, that is commonly found in breast and lung cancers, and especially in grade IV glioblastoma multiforme, a cancer which has for the most part proved unresponsive to current therapies. The aptamer binds to cells expressing EGFR, blocks receptor autophosphorylation, and prevents proliferation of tumor cells in three-dimensional matrices. In short, the aptamer is a promising candidate for further development as an anti-tumor therapeutic. In addition, Aptamer E07 is readily internalized into EGFR-expressing cells, raising the possibility that it might be used to escort other anti-tumor or contrast agents.


Nature Methods | 2012

Aptamers as potential tools for super-resolution microscopy

Felipe Opazo; Matthew Levy; Michelle Byrom; Christina Schäfer; Claudia Geisler; Teja W. Groemer; Andrew D. Ellington; Silvio O. Rizzoli

(a) The TfnR aptamer c2, the EGFR aptamer E07 and their respective control aptamers (random sequences) were incubated at 37°C with human A431 cells as described in Supplementary Methods. Similarly, HeLa cells stably transfected with a human PSMA construct were incubated with the PSMA A9 aptamer or its random control. The pairs of images (control and aptamer) are equally scaled to allow a direct visual comparison. The insets in the control images correspond to the same images, scaled to a level where autofluorescence can be visualized. Scale bar, 10 μm. (b) Colocalization of the different aptamers with endosomal labels. We co-incubated the cells (same as above) with aptamers against TfnR (c2) or PSMA (A9) and Alexa488-transferrin (Invitrogen), since the latter constitutes an ideal marker for early endosomes.


PLOS Biology | 2012

Evolutionarily Repurposed Networks Reveal the Well-Known Antifungal Drug Thiabendazole to Be a Novel Vascular Disrupting Agent

Hye Ji Cha; Michelle Byrom; Paul E. Mead; Andrew D. Ellington; John B. Wallingford; Edward M. Marcotte

Analysis of a genetic module repurposed between yeast and vertebrates reveals that a common antifungal medication is also a potent vascular disrupting agent.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Transcription yield of fully 2′-modified RNA can be increased by the addition of thermostabilizing mutations to T7 RNA polymerase mutants

Adam J. Meyer; Daniel J. Garry; Bradley Hall; Michelle Byrom; Hannah G. McDonald; Xu Yang; Y. Whitney Yin; Andrew D. Ellington

On average, mutations are deleterious to proteins. Mutations conferring new function to a protein often come at the expense of protein folding or stability, reducing overall activity. Over the years, a panel of T7 RNA polymerases have been designed or evolved to accept nucleotides with modified ribose moieties. These modified RNAs have proven useful, especially in vivo, but the transcriptional yields tend to be quite low. Here we show that mutations previously shown to increase the thermal tolerance of T7 RNA polymerase can increase the activity of mutants with expanded substrate range. The resulting polymerase mutants can be used to generate 2′-O-methyl modified RNA with yields much higher than enzymes currently employed.


Molecular Therapy | 2012

A General RNA Motif for Cellular Transfection

Maria de Lourdes Borba Magalhães; Michelle Byrom; Amy Yan; Linsley Kelly; Na Li; Raquel Furtado; Deborah Palliser; Andrew D. Ellington; Matthew Levy

We have developed a selection scheme to generate nucleic acid sequences that recognize and directly internalize into mammalian cells without the aid of conventional delivery methods. To demonstrate the generality of the technology, two independent selections with different starting pools were performed against distinct target cells. Each selection yielded a single highly functional sequence, both of which folded into a common core structure. This internalization signal can be adapted for use as a general purpose reagent for transfection into a wide variety of cell types including primary cells.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Exquisite allele discrimination by toehold hairpin primers

Michelle Byrom; Sanchita Bhadra; Yu Sherry Jiang; Andrew D. Ellington

The ability to detect and monitor single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in biological samples is an enabling research and clinical tool. We have developed a surprising, inexpensive primer design method that provides exquisite discrimination between SNPs. The field of DNA computation is largely reliant on using so-called toeholds to initiate strand displacement reactions, leading to the execution of kinetically trapped circuits. We have now similarly found that the short toehold sequence to a target of interest can initiate both strand displacement within the hairpin and extension of the primer by a polymerase, both of which will further stabilize the primer:template complex. However, if the short toehold does not bind, neither of these events can readily occur and thus amplification should not occur. Toehold hairpin primers were used to detect drug resistance alleles in two genes, rpoB and katG, in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome, and ten alleles in the Escherichia coli genome. During real-time PCR, the primers discriminate between mismatched templates with Cq delays that are frequently so large that the presence or absence of mismatches is essentially a ‘yes/no’ answer.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Next-Generation Sequencing as Input for Chemometrics in Differential Sensing Routines

Sara Goodwin; Alexandra M. Gade; Michelle Byrom; Baine Herrera; Camille Spears; Eric V. Anslyn; Andrew D. Ellington

Differential sensing (DS) methods traditionally use spatially arrayed receptors and optical signals to create score plots from multivariate data which classify individual analytes or complex mixtures. Herein, a new approach is described, in which nucleic acid sequences and sequence counts are used as the multivariate data without the necessity of a spatial array. To demonstrate this approach to DS, previously selected aptamers, identified from the literature, were used as semi-specific receptors, Next-Gen DNA sequencing was used to generate data, and cell line differentiation was the test-bed application. The study of a principal component analysis loading plot revealed cross-reactivity between the aptamers. The technique generates high-dimensionality score plots, and should be applicable to any mixture of complex and subtly different analytes for which nucleic acid-based receptors exist.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2018

Genetic engineering of bee gut microbiome bacteria with a toolkit for modular assembly of broad-host-range plasmids

Sean P. Leonard; Jiri Perutka; J. Elijah Powell; Peng Geng; Darby D. Richhart; Michelle Byrom; Shaunak Kar; Bryan W. Davies; Andrew D. Ellington; Nancy A. Moran; Jeffrey E. Barrick

Engineering the bacteria present in animal microbiomes promises to lead to breakthroughs in medicine and agriculture, but progress is hampered by a dearth of tools for genetically modifying the diverse species that comprise these communities. Here we present a toolkit of genetic parts for the modular construction of broad-host-range plasmids built around the RSF1010 replicon. Golden Gate assembly of parts in this toolkit can be used to rapidly test various antibiotic resistance markers, promoters, fluorescent reporters, and other coding sequences in newly isolated bacteria. We demonstrate the utility of this toolkit in multiple species of Proteobacteria that are native to the gut microbiomes of honey bees ( Apis mellifera) and bumble bees (B ombus sp.). Expressing fluorescent proteins in Snodgrassella alvi, Gilliamella apicola, Bartonella apis, and Serratia strains enables us to visualize how these bacteria colonize the bee gut. We also demonstrate CRISPRi repression in B. apis and use Cas9-facilitated knockout of an S. alvi adhesion gene to show that it is important for colonization of the gut. Beyond characterizing how the gut microbiome influences the health of these prominent pollinators, this bee microbiome toolkit (BTK) will be useful for engineering bacteria found in other natural microbial communities.


Nature Biotechnology | 2018

Custom selenoprotein production enabled by laboratory evolution of recoded bacterial strains

Ross Thyer; Raghav Shroff; Dustin R. Klein; Simon d'Oelsnitz; Victoria C. Cotham; Michelle Byrom; Jennifer S. Brodbelt; Andrew D. Ellington

Incorporation of the rare amino acid selenocysteine to form diselenide bonds can improve stability and function of synthetic peptide therapeutics. However, application of this approach to recombinant proteins has been hampered by heterogeneous incorporation, low selenoprotein yields, and poor fitness of bacterial producer strains. We report the evolution of recoded Escherichia coli strains with improved fitness that are superior hosts for recombinant selenoprotein production. We apply an engineered β-lactamase containing an essential diselenide bond to enforce selenocysteine dependence during continuous evolution of recoded E. coli strains. Evolved strains maintain an expanded genetic code indefinitely. We engineer a fluorescent reporter to quantify selenocysteine incorporation in vivo and show complete decoding of UAG codons as selenocysteine. Replacement of native, labile disulfide bonds in antibody fragments with diselenide bonds vastly improves resistance to reducing conditions. Highly seleno-competent bacterial strains enable industrial-scale selenoprotein expression and unique diselenide architecture, advancing our ability to customize the selenoproteome.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Engineering Signaling Aptamers That Rely on Kinetic Rather Than Equilibrium Competition

Yan Du; Shu Jun Zhen; Bingling Li; Michelle Byrom; Yu Sherry Jiang; Andrew D. Ellington

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Andrew D. Ellington

University of Texas at Austin

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Edward M. Marcotte

University of Texas at Austin

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Hye Ji Cha

University of Texas at Austin

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John B. Wallingford

University of Texas at Austin

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Matthew Levy

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Na Li

University of Texas at Austin

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Raghav Shroff

University of Texas at Austin

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Sanchita Bhadra

University of Texas at Austin

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Yu Sherry Jiang

University of Texas at Austin

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Adam J. Meyer

University of Texas at Austin

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