4.8 Article

Image Encoding Using Multi-Level DNA Barcodes with Nanopore Readout

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 28, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202100711

Keywords

DNA nanostructures; encryption; information storage; nanopores; strand displacement

Funding

  1. ERC Consolidator Grant [647144]

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The text introduces a DNA nanostructure-based data storage method, which saves, encrypts, and recovers images using quaternary encoding. By attaching DNA multi-way junctions of different sizes to DNA carriers, the storage capacity is increased. This method avoids the involvement of proteins or enzymes, realizing a pure DNA storage system on a nanopore platform.
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) nanostructure-based data encoding is an emerging information storage mode, offering rewritable, editable, and secure data storage. Herein, a DNA nanostructure-based storage method established on a solid-state nanopore sensing platform to save and encrypt a 2D grayscale image is proposed. DNA multi-way junctions of different sizes are attached to a double strand of DNA carriers, resulting in distinct levels of current blockades when passing through a glass nanopore with diameters around 14 nm. The resulting quaternary encoding doubles the capacity relative to a classical binary system. Through toehold-mediated strand displacement reactions, the DNA nanostructures can be precisely added to and removed from the DNA carrier. By encoding the image into 16 DNA carriers using the quaternary barcodes and reading them in one simultaneous measurement, the image is successfully saved, encrypted, and recovered. Avoiding any proteins or enzymatic reactions, the authors thus realize a pure DNA storage system on a nanopore platform with increased capacity and programmability.

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