4.8 Article

Probing the Mechanical Properties of DNA Nanostructures with Metadynamics

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 8784-8797

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c08999

Keywords

Metadynamics; Molecular simulation; Molecular dynamics; DNA nanotechnology; DNA origami

Funding

  1. Royal Society University Research Fellowship [UF160152]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) under the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (ERC-STG) [851667 - NANO-CELL]
  3. EPSRC DTP studentship
  4. EPSRC [EP/P020259/1]
  5. STFC

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The study utilizes metadynamics to sample the free energy landscapes of DNA nanostructures and demonstrates its ability to predict the mechanical response of DNA nanodevices. These findings are significant for the design and application of DNA nanostructures.
Molecular dynamics simulations are often used to provide feedback in the design workflow of DNA nanostructures. However, even with coarse-grained models, the convergence of distributions from unbiased simulation is slow, limiting applications to equilibrium structural properties. Given the increasing interest in dynamic, reconfigurable, and deformable devices, methods that enable efficient quantification of large ranges of motion, conformational transitions, and mechanical deformation are critically needed. Metadynamics is an automated biasing technique that enables the rapid acquisition of molecular conformational distributions by flattening free energy landscapes. Here we leveraged this approach to sample the free energy landscapes of DNA nanostructures whose unbiased dynamics are nonergodic, including bistable Holliday junctions and part of a bistable DNA origami structure. Taking a DNA origami-compliant joint as a case study, we further demonstrate that metadynamics can predict the mechanical response of a full DNA origami device to an applied force, showing good agreement with experiments. Our results exemplify the efficient computation of free energy landscapes and force response in DNA nanodevices, which could be applied for rapid feedback in iterative design workflows and generally facilitate the integration of simulation and experiments. Metadynamics will be particularly useful to guide the design of dynamic devices for nanorobotics, biosensing, or nanomanufacturing applications.

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