4.8 Article

Quantitative prediction of 3D solution shape and flexibility of nucleic acid nanostructures

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 2862-2868

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkr1173

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MIT Faculty
  2. Samuel A. Goldblith Professorship
  3. Cluster for Integrated Protein Science Munich
  4. TUM Institute for Advanced Study
  5. TUM graduate school 'Materials at Complex Interfaces'(CompInt)
  6. Technische Universitat Munchen Institute for Advanced Study by the German Excellence Initiative
  7. state of Bavaria

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DNA nanotechnology enables the programmed synthesis of intricate nanometer-scale structures for diverse applications in materials and biological science. Precise control over the 3D solution shape and mechanical flexibility of target designs is important to achieve desired functionality. Because experimental validation of designed nanostructures is time-consuming and cost-intensive, predictive physical models of nanostructure shape and flexibility have the capacity to enhance dramatically the design process. Here, we significantly extend and experimentally validate a computational modeling framework for DNA origami previously presented as CanDo [Castro,C.E., Kilchherr,F., Kim,D.-N., Shiao,E.L., Wauer,T., Wortmann,P., Bathe,M., Dietz,H. (2011) A primer to scaffolded DNA origami. Nat. Meth., 8, 221-229.]. 3D solution shape and flexibility are predicted from basepair connectivity maps now accounting for nicks in the DNA double helix, entropic elasticity of single-stranded DNA, and distant crossovers required to model wireframe structures, in addition to previous modeling (Castro,C.E., et al.) that accounted only for the canonical twist, bend and stretch stiffness of double-helical DNA domains. Systematic experimental validation of nanostructure flexibility mediated by internal crossover density probed using a 32-helix DNA bundle demonstrates for the first time that our model not only predicts the 3D solution shape of complex DNA nanostructures but also their mechanical flexibility. Thus, our model represents an important advance in the quantitative understanding of DNA-based nanostructure shape and flexibility, and we anticipate that this model will increase significantly the number and variety of synthetic nanostructures designed using nucleic acids.

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