Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: SMART Method for Custom Enzyme Development
The Core Concept: SMART (Single-Molecule Assay on Ribonucleic acid by Translated product) is an advanced in vitro selection platform designed to accelerate directed enzyme evolution. It significantly reduces the time and cost required to identify superior enzyme variants by tracking them at the single-molecule level.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike traditional directed evolution, which often requires screening up to 100 trillion candidate variants over several weeks, the SMART system links an enzyme protein directly to its corresponding messenger RNA (mRNA) blueprint using puromycin as a chemical bridge. An auxiliary unit utilizing engineered ascorbate peroxidase 2 (APEX2) detects target enzyme activity by attaching a biotin marker to nearby molecules, allowing for rapid isolation and capture of the successful variants.
Origin/History: Developed by a collaborative research group led by Nagoya University, the Institute of Science Tokyo, and Saitama University, the SMART method builds upon the Nobel Prize-winning strategy of directed evolution. The findings, which demonstrate the system's ability to reduce screening time from weeks to just a few days without the need for specialized equipment, were published in ACS Synthetic Biology.






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