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Sunmin Ahn Journal Club Presentation October 23, 2006
Folding DNA to Create Nanoscale Shapes and Patterns Paul W. K. Rothemund Nature, V440, , 2006 Sunmin Ahn Journal Club Presentation October 23, 2006
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Outline Introduction Review of DNA structure Designing DNA origami
Folding with viral genome Patterning Conclusion
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Introduction Parallel synthesis of nanostructures
Building DNA patterns and shapes with a long ssDNA and a bunch of staple strands One pot self assembly
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DNA Structure
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Designing Pattern 1. Generation of block diagram
- Manual design 1. Generation of block diagram 2. Generation of a folding path - raster fill pattern must be hand designed
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Designing Pattern 3. Generation of a first pass design
- Computer aided 3. Generation of a first pass design - raster fill pattern must be hand designed - no bases left unpaired - single phosphate from each backbone occurs in the gap - small angle bending does not affect the width of DNA origami
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Designing Pattern 4. Refinement of the helical domain length
- Computer aided 4. Refinement of the helical domain length - to minimize strain in design - twist of scaffold calculated and scaffold x-over strains are balanced by a single bp change - periodic x-overs of staples are arranged with glide symmetry minor groove faces alternating directions in alternating columns
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Designing Pattern 5. Breaking and merging of strands - Computer aided
- pairs of adjacent staples are merged to yield fewer, longer staples - merge patterns are not unique - staggered merge strengthens seam
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Designing Pattern 5. Breaking and merging of strands - Computer aided
- rectilinear merge
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Folding viral genome Circular genomic DNA from virus M13mp18 chosen as a scaffold Naturally ssDNA 7249-nt long For linear scaffold 73-nt region containing 20-bp stem hairpin was cut with BsrBI restriction enzyme resulting 7167nt long linear strand 100X excess of staples and short (<25nt) remainder strands mixed with scaffold and annealed 95ºC to 20ºC in a PCR machine (< 2 hours) Samples deposited on mica and imaged with AFM in tapping mode
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Folding viral genome Square Rectangle linear scaffold 13% well formed
25% rectangular fragments 25% hourglass fragments Rectangle tests “bridged” seam circular scaffold 90% well formed 1μm scale bars
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Folding viral genome Star Smiley demonstrates certain arbitrary shape
linear and circular scaffold 11% and 63% well formed higher % of well formed shapes with circular scaffold may be due to higher purity of the scaffold strand Linear scaffold Circular scaffold 100nm scale bars Smiley circular scaffold need not be topological disc 90% well formed narrow structures are difficult to form provides “weak spot” 100nm scale bar
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Folding viral genome Triangle from 3 rectangles
single covalent bond holding the scaffold together less than 1% well formed stacking 100nm scale bar Triangle built from 3 trapezoids circular scaffold 88% well formed with bridging staples 55% well formed without bridging staples 100nm scale bar
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Stacking Interaction between blunt end helices cause stacking
Staple strands on the edge may be removed (B) Addition of 4T hairpin loops (F) Addition of 4T tails on staples that has ends on the edge of the shape (D) Stacked rectangles Staple strand on the edge removed F C D Normal amount of aggregation (Smileys) Addition of 4T tails 1μm scale bars
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Defects and Damages 100nm scale bars
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Stoichiometry In most experiments 100~300 fold excess over scaffold was used 10 fold excess is safe, but not a fundamental requirement 2-fold excess may be used 1μm scale bars
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Patterning
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Patterning Binary patterning “1” – 3nm above mica surface
1μm scale bars
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Patterning Infinite periodic structures are made using extended staples Stoichiometry becomes very important ~30 Megadalton structure (individual origami ~4megadalton) 100nm scale bars
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Difficulties Blunt end stacking Down hairpin loops
But mostly AFM imaging!!!
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What about 2º Structures?
Lowest E folds calculated Strong structure Weak structure Average kcal/mole Random 6000 base sequence generated with same base composition as M13mp18 - Similar 2º structure - Average free E kcal/mole
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How does it work? Strand invasion Excess of staples
Cooperative effects Designs that doesn’t allow staples to bind to each other
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Conclusion Quantitative and statistical analysis
Better imaging technique should be implemented DNA nonostructure patterning may be used as templates for programmed molecular arrays Protein arrays nanowires
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