Iterative cycles of in vitro selection and amplification allow
rare functional nucleic acid molecules, aptamers, to be isolated
from large sequence pools. Here we present an analysis of the
progression of a selection experiment that simultaneously yielded
two families of RNA aptamers against two disparate targets:
the intended target protein (B52/SRp55) and the partitioning
matrix. We tracked the sequence abundance and binding activity
to reveal the enrichment of the aptamers through successive
generations of selected pools. The two aptamer families showed
distinct trajectories of evolution, as did members within a
single family. We also developed a method to control the relative
abundance of an aptamer family in selected pools. This method,
involving specific ribonuclease digestion, can be used to reduce
the background selection for aptamers that bind the matrix.
Additionally, it can be used to isolate a full spectrum of aptamers
in a sequential and exhaustive manner for all the different
targets in a mixture.