Dynamic
DNA Origami Device for Measuring Compressive
Depletion Forces
Posted on 2017-06-05 - 00:00
The
ability to self-assemble nanodevices with programmed structural
dynamics that can sense and respond to the local environment could
enable transformative applications in fields including molecular robotics,
nanomanufacturing, and nanomedicine. The responsive function of biomolecules
is often driven by alterations in conformational distributions mediated
by highly sensitive interactions with the local environment. Here,
we mimic this approach by engineering inherent nanoscale structural
dynamics (nanodynamics) into a DNA device that exhibits a distribution
of conformations including two stable states separated by a transition
state where the energy barrier height is on the scale of the thermal
energy, kBT = 4.1 pN·nm,
enabling spontaneous transitions between states. We further establish
design principles to regulate the equilibrium and kinetic behavior
by substituting a few DNA strand components. We use single-molecule
Förster resonance energy transfer measurements to show these
nanodynamic properties are sensitive to sub-piconewton depletion forces
in the presence of molecular crowding agents, and the device can measure
depletion forces with a resolution of ∼100 fN. We anticipate
that this approach of engineering nanodynamic DNA devices will enable
molecular-scale systems that sense and respond to their local environment
with extremely high sensitivity.
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Hudoba, Michael
W.; Luo, Yi; Zacharias, Angelita; Poirier, Michael G.; Castro, Carlos E. (2017). Dynamic
DNA Origami Device for Measuring Compressive
Depletion Forces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.6b07097