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From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal

We live in a macroscopic three-dimensional world, but our best description of the structure of matter is at the atomic and molecular scale. Understanding the relationship between the two scales requires that we bridge from the molecular world to the macroscopic world. Connecting these two domains wi...

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Autores principales: Zheng, Jianping, Birktoft, Jens J., Chen, Yi, Wang, Tong, Sha, Ruojie, Constantinou, Pamela E., Ginell, Stephan L., Mao, Chengde, Seeman, Nadrian C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2764300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19727196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature08274
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author Zheng, Jianping
Birktoft, Jens J.
Chen, Yi
Wang, Tong
Sha, Ruojie
Constantinou, Pamela E.
Ginell, Stephan L.
Mao, Chengde
Seeman, Nadrian C.
author_facet Zheng, Jianping
Birktoft, Jens J.
Chen, Yi
Wang, Tong
Sha, Ruojie
Constantinou, Pamela E.
Ginell, Stephan L.
Mao, Chengde
Seeman, Nadrian C.
author_sort Zheng, Jianping
collection PubMed
description We live in a macroscopic three-dimensional world, but our best description of the structure of matter is at the atomic and molecular scale. Understanding the relationship between the two scales requires that we bridge from the molecular world to the macroscopic world. Connecting these two domains with atomic precision is a central goal of the natural sciences, but it requires high spatial control of the 3D structure of matter.1 The simplest practical route to producing precisely designed 3D macroscopic objects is to form a crystalline arrangement by self-assembly, because such a periodic array has only conceptually simple requirements: [1] A motif whose 3D structure is robust, [2] dominant affinity interactions between parts of the motif when it self-associates, and [3] a predictable structures for these affinity interactions. Fulfilling all these criteria to produce a 3D periodic system is not easy, but it should readily be achieved by well-structured branched DNA motifs tailed by sticky ends.2 Complementary sticky ends associate with each other preferentially and assume the well-known B-DNA structure when they do so;3 the helically repeating nature of DNA facilitates the construction of a periodic array. It is key that the directions of propagation associated with the sticky ends not share the same plane, but extend to form a 3D arrangement of matter. Here, we report the crystal structure at 4 Å resolution of a designed, self-assembled, 3D crystal based on the DNA tensegrity triangle.4 The data demonstrate clearly that it is possible to design and self-assemble a well-ordered macromolecular 3D crystalline lattice with precise control.
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spelling pubmed-27643002010-03-03 From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal Zheng, Jianping Birktoft, Jens J. Chen, Yi Wang, Tong Sha, Ruojie Constantinou, Pamela E. Ginell, Stephan L. Mao, Chengde Seeman, Nadrian C. Nature Article We live in a macroscopic three-dimensional world, but our best description of the structure of matter is at the atomic and molecular scale. Understanding the relationship between the two scales requires that we bridge from the molecular world to the macroscopic world. Connecting these two domains with atomic precision is a central goal of the natural sciences, but it requires high spatial control of the 3D structure of matter.1 The simplest practical route to producing precisely designed 3D macroscopic objects is to form a crystalline arrangement by self-assembly, because such a periodic array has only conceptually simple requirements: [1] A motif whose 3D structure is robust, [2] dominant affinity interactions between parts of the motif when it self-associates, and [3] a predictable structures for these affinity interactions. Fulfilling all these criteria to produce a 3D periodic system is not easy, but it should readily be achieved by well-structured branched DNA motifs tailed by sticky ends.2 Complementary sticky ends associate with each other preferentially and assume the well-known B-DNA structure when they do so;3 the helically repeating nature of DNA facilitates the construction of a periodic array. It is key that the directions of propagation associated with the sticky ends not share the same plane, but extend to form a 3D arrangement of matter. Here, we report the crystal structure at 4 Å resolution of a designed, self-assembled, 3D crystal based on the DNA tensegrity triangle.4 The data demonstrate clearly that it is possible to design and self-assemble a well-ordered macromolecular 3D crystalline lattice with precise control. 2009-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2764300/ /pubmed/19727196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature08274 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Zheng, Jianping
Birktoft, Jens J.
Chen, Yi
Wang, Tong
Sha, Ruojie
Constantinou, Pamela E.
Ginell, Stephan L.
Mao, Chengde
Seeman, Nadrian C.
From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title_full From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title_fullStr From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title_full_unstemmed From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title_short From Molecular to Macroscopic via the Rational Design of a Self-Assembled 3D DNA Crystal
title_sort from molecular to macroscopic via the rational design of a self-assembled 3d dna crystal
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2764300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19727196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature08274
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