DNA Origami Design of Dolphin-Shaped Structures with Flexible Tails

Ebbe Sloth Andersen(Danish National Research Foundation), Mingdong Dong(Danish National Research Foundation), Morten Muhlig Nielsen(Aarhus University), Kasper Jahn(Aarhus University), Allan Lind-Thomsen(University of Copenhagen), Wael Mamdouh(Aarhus University), Kurt V. Gothelf(Aarhus University), Flemming Besenbacher(Danish National Research Foundation), Jørgen Kjems(Danish National Research Foundation)
ACS Nano
June 1, 2008
Cited by 293

Abstract

The DNA origami method allows the folding of long, single-stranded DNA sequences into arbitrary two-dimensional structures by a set of designed oligonucleotides. The method has revealed an unexpected strength and efficiency for programmed self-assembly of molecular nanostructures and makes it possible to produce fully addressable nanostructures with wide-reaching application potential within the emerging area of nanoscience. Here we present a user-friendly software package for designing DNA origami structures ( http://www.cdna.dk/origami ) and demonstrate its use by the design of a dolphin-like DNA origami structure that was imaged by high-resolution AFM in liquid. The software package provides automatic generation of DNA origami structures, manual editing, interactive overviews, atomic models, tracks the design history, and has a fully extendable toolbox. From the AFM images, it was demonstrated that different designs of the dolphin tail region provided various levels of flexibility in a predictable fashion. Finally, we show that the addition of specific attachment sites promotes dimerization between two independently self-assembled dolphin structures, and that these interactions stabilize the flexible tail.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis