4.8 Article

Noncanonical Self-Assembly of Multifunctional DNA Nanoflowers for Biomedical Applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 135, Issue 44, Pages 16438-16445

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja406115e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Scientific Program of China [2011CB911000]
  2. Foundation for Innovative Research Groups of NSFC [21221003]
  3. China National Instrumentation Program [2011YQ03012412]
  4. National Institutes of Health [GM079359, CA133086]

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DNA nanotechnology has been extensively explored to assemble various functional nanostructures for versatile applications. Mediated by Watson Crick base-pairing, these DNA nanostructures have been conventionally assembled through hybridization of many short DNA building blocks. Here we report the noncanonical self-assembly of multifunctional DNA nanostructures, termed as nanoflowers (NFs), and the versatile biomedical applications. These NFs were assembled from long DNA building blocks generated via rolling circle replication (RCR) of a designer template. NF assembly was driven by liquid crystallization and dense packaging of building blocks, without relying on Watson Crick base-pairing between DNA strands, thereby avoiding the otherwise conventional complicated DNA sequence design. NF sizes were readily tunable in a wide range, by simply adjusting such parameters as assembly time and template sequences. NFs were exceptionally resistant to nuclease degradation, denaturation, or dissociation at extremely low concentration, presumably resulting from the dense DNA packaging in NPs. The exceptional biostability is critical for biomedical applications. By rational design, NFs can be readily incorporated with myriad functional moieties. All these properties make NFs promising for versatile applications. As a proof-of-principle demonstration, in this study, NFs were integrated with aptamers, bioimaging agents, and drug loading sites, and the resultant multifunctional NFs were demonstrated for selective cancer cell recognition, bioimaging and targeted anticancer drug delivery.

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