Assembly of complex structures from a small set of tiles is a common theme in biology. For example, many copies of identical proteins make up polyhedron-shaped, viral capsids and tubulin can make long microtubules. This inspired the development of tile-based DNA self-assembly for nanoconstruction, particularly for structures with high symmetries. In the final structure, each type of motif will adopt the same conformation, either rigid or with defined flexibility. For structures that have no symmetry, their assembly remains a challenge from a small set of tiles. To meet this challenge, algorithmic self-assembly has been explored driven by computational science, but it is not clear how to implement this approach to one-dimensional (1D) structures. Here, we have demonstrated that a constant shift of a conformational equilibrium could allow 1D structures to evolve. As shown by atomic force microscopy imaging, one type of DNA tile successfully assembled into DNA spirals and concentric circles, which became less and less curved from the structure's center outward. This work points to a new direction for tile-based DNA assembly.
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Assembly of Two‐Dimensional DNA Arrays Could Influence the Formation of Their Component Tiles
Abstract Tile‐based DNA self‐assembly is a powerful approach for nano‐constructions. In this approach, individual DNA single strands first assemble into well‐defined structural tiles, which, then, further associate with each other into final nanostructures. It is a general assumption that the lower‐level structures (tiles) determine the higher‐level, final structures. In this study, we present concrete experimental data to show that higher‐level structures could, at least in the current example, also impact on the formation of lower‐level structures. This study prompts questions such as: how general is this phenomenon in programmed DNA self‐assembly and can we turn it into a useful tool for fine tuning DNA self‐assembly?
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- PAR ID:
- 10371603
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- ChemBioChem
- Volume:
- 23
- Issue:
- 18
- ISSN:
- 1439-4227
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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