11 research outputs found

    Complex DNA Nanostructures from Oligonucleotide Ensembles

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    The first synthetic DNA nanostructures were created by self-assembly of a small number of oligonucleotides. Introduction of the DNA origami method provided a new paradigm for designing and creating two- and three-dimensional DNA nanostructures by folding a large single-stranded DNA and ‘stapling’ it together with a library of oligonucleotides. Despite its power and wide-ranging implementation, the DNA origami technique suffers from some limitations. Foremost among these is the limited number of useful single-stranded scaffolds of biological origin. This report describes a new approach to creating large DNA nanostructures exclusively from synthetic oligonucleotides. The essence of this approach is to replace the single-stranded scaffold in DNA origami with a library of oligonucleotides termed “scaples” (<u>sca</u>ffold sta<u>ples</u>). Scaples eliminate the need for scaffolds of biological origin and create new opportunities for producing larger and more diverse DNA nanostructures as well as simultaneous assembly of distinct structures in a “single-pot” reaction

    Dominant Analytical Techniques in DNA Nanotechnology for Various Applications

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    Dominant Analytical Techniques in DNA Nanotechnology for Various Application

    Optical Properties of Vibronically Coupled Cy3 Dimers on DNA Scaffolds

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    We examine the effect of electronic coupling on the optical properties of Cy3 dimers attached to DNA duplexes as a function of base pair (bp) separation using steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy. For close Cy3–Cy3 separations, 0 and 1 bp between dyes, intermediate to strong electronic coupling is revealed by modulation of the absorption and fluorescence properties including spectral band shape, peak wavelength, and excited-state lifetime. Using a vibronic exciton model, we estimate coupling strengths of 150 and 266 cm–1 for the 1 and 0 bp separations, respectively, which are comparable to those found in natural light-harvesting complexes. For the strongest electronic coupling (0 bp separation), we observe that the absorption band shape is strongly affected by the base pairs that surround the dyes, where more strongly hydrogen-bonded G–C pairs produce a red-shifted absorption spectrum consistent with a J-type dimer. This effect is studied theoretically using molecular dynamics simulation, which predicts an in-line dye configuration that is consistent with the experimental J-type spectrum. When the Cy3 dimers are in a standard aqueous buffer, the presence of relatively strong electronic coupling is accompanied by decreased fluorescence lifetime, suggesting that it promotes nonradiative relaxation in cyanine dyes. However, we show that the use of a viscous solvent can suppress this nonradiative recombination and thereby restore the dimer fluorescent emission. Ultrafast transient absorption measurements of Cy3 dimers in both standard aqueous buffer and viscous glycerol buffer suggest that sufficiently strong electronic coupling increases the probability of excited-state relaxation through a dark state that is related to Cy3 torsional motion

    Understanding Self-Assembled Pseudoisocyanine Dye Aggregates in DNA Nanostructures and Their Exciton Relay Transfer Capabilities

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    Progress has been made using B-form DNA duplex strands to template chromophores in ordered molecular aggregates known as J-aggregates. These aggregates can exhibit strong electronic coupling, extended coherent lifetimes, and long-range exciton delocalization under appropriate conditions. Certain cyanine dyes such as pseudoisocyanine (PIC) dye have shown a proclivity to form aggregates in specific DNA sequences. In particular, DX-tiles containing nonalternating poly­(dA)–poly­(dT) dinucleotide tracks (AT-tracks), which template noncovalent PIC dye aggregates, have been demonstrated to exhibit interesting emergent photonic properties. These DNA-based aggregates are referred to as J-bits for their similarity to J-aggregates. Here, we assemble multifluorophore DX-tile scaffolds which template J-bits into both contiguous and noncontiguous linear arrays. Our goal is to understand the relay capability of noncontiguous J-bit arrays and probe the effects that orientation and position have on the energy transfer between them. We find that linearly contiguous J-bits can relay excitons from an initial AlexaFluor 405 donor to a terminal AlexaFluor 647 acceptor across a distance of up to 16.3 nm. We observed a maximum increase in energy transfer of 41% in the shortest scaffold and an 11% increase in energy transfer across the maximum distance. However, in nonlinear arrays, exciton transfer is not detectable, even when off-axis J-bit-to-J-bit transfer distances were <2 nm. These results, in conjunction with the previous work on PIC–DNA systems, suggest that PIC–DNA-based systems may currently be limited to simple 1-D designs, which prevent isolating J-bits for enhanced energy-transfer characteristics until further understanding and improvements to the system can be made

    Purification of DNA Nanoparticles Using Photocleavable Biotin Tethers

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    The number of applications of self-assembled deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) origami nanoparticles (DNA NPs) has increased drastically, following the development of a variety of single-stranded template DNA (ssDNA) that can serve as the scaffold strand. In addition to viral genomes, such as M13 bacteriophage and lambda DNAs, enzymatically produced ssDNA from various template sources is rapidly gaining traction and being applied as the scaffold for DNA NP preparation. However, separating fully formed DNA NPs that have custom scaffolds from crude assembly mixes is often a multistep process of first separating the ssDNA scaffold from its enzymatic amplification process and then isolating the assembled DNA NPs from excess precursor strands. Only then is the DNA NP sample ready for downstream characterization and application. In this work, we highlight a single-step purification of custom sequence- or M13-derived scaffold-based DNA NPs using photocleavable biotin tethers. The process only requires an inexpensive ultraviolet (UV) lamp, and DNA NPs with up to 90% yield and high purity are obtained. We show the versatility of the process in separating two multihelix bundle structures and a wireframe polyhedral architecture

    Determining the Cytosolic Stability of Small DNA Nanostructures <i>In Cellula</i>

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    DNA nanostructures have proven potential in biomedicine. However, their intracellular interactionsespecially cytosolic stabilityremain mostly unknown and attempts to discern this are confounded by the complexities of endocytic uptake and entrapment. Here, we bypass the endocytic uptake and evaluate the DNA structural stability directly in live cells. Commonly used DNA structurescrosshairs and a tetrahedronwere labeled with a multistep Förster resonance energy transfer dye cascade and microinjected into the cytosol of transformed and primary cells. Energy transfer loss, as monitored by fluorescence microscopy, reported the structure’s direct time-resolved breakdown in cellula. The results showed rapid degradation of the DNA crosshair within 20 min, while the tetrahedron remained consistently intact for at least 1 h postinjection. Nuclease assays in conjunction with a current understanding of the tetrahedron’s torsional rigidity confirmed its higher stability. Such studies can inform design parameters for future DNA nanostructures where programmable degradation rates may be required

    Excitonically Coupled Cyanine Dye Dimers as Optical Energy Transfer Relays on DNA Templates

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    An attractive strategy to improve the energy transfer properties of synthetic dye networks is to optimize the excitonic coupling between the dyes to increase the energy transfer rates. To explore this possibility, we investigated the use of J-like cyanine dye dimers (Cy3 and Cy5 dimers) on DNA duplexes as energy transfer relays in molecular photonic wires. This approach is based on the use of the collective emission dipole of a J-dimer to enhance the FRET rate between the dimer relay and a remote acceptor dye. Experimentally, we find that in room temperature aqueous buffer conditions, the dimer relay provided no benefit in the energy transfer quantum yield relative to a simple monomer relay. Further investigation led us to determine that enhanced nonradiative relaxation, non-ideal dye orientation within the dimer, and unfavorable dye orientation between the dimer and the acceptor dye limit energy transfer through the dimer relay. We hypothesized that nonradiative relaxation was the largest factor and demonstrated this by placing the sample in a viscous solvent or by cooling the sample, which dramatically improved the energy transfer through the J-like dimer relay. Similar to how the formation of DNA-templated J-like dimers has improved, the practical use of J-like dimers to optimize energy transfer quantum efficiency will require improvements in the ability to control the orientation between dyes to reach its full potential

    Understanding Förster Resonance Energy Transfer in the Sheet Regime with DNA Brick-Based Dye Networks

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    Controlling excitonic energy transfer at the molecular level is a key requirement for transitioning nanophotonics research to viable devices with the main inspiration coming from biological light-harvesting antennas that collect and direct light energy with near-unity efficiency using Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET). Among putative FRET processes, point-to-plane FRET between donors and acceptors arrayed in two-dimensional sheets is predicted to be particularly efficient with a theoretical 1/r4 energy transfer distance (r) dependency versus the 1/r6 dependency seen for a single donor–acceptor interaction. However, quantitative validation has been confounded by a lack of robust experimental approaches that can rigidly place dyes in the required nanoscale arrangements. To create such assemblies, we utilize a DNA brick scaffold, referred to as a DNA block, which incorporates up to five two-dimensional planes with each displaying from 1 to 12 copies of five different donor, acceptor, or intermediary relay dyes. Nanostructure characterization along with steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopic data were combined with molecular dynamics modeling and detailed numerical simulations to compare the energy transfer efficiencies observed in the experimental DNA block assemblies to theoretical expectations. Overall, we demonstrate clear signatures of sheet regime FRET, and from this we provide a better understanding of what is needed to realize the benefits of such energy transfer in artificial dye networks along with FRET-based sensing and imaging

    Synthesis of Substituted Cy5 Phosphoramidite Derivatives and Their Incorporation into Oligonucleotides Using Automated DNA Synthesis

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    Cyanine dyes represent a family of organic fluorophores with widespread utility in biological-based applications ranging from real-time PCR probes to protein labeling. One burgeoning use currently being explored with indodicarbocyanine (Cy5) in particular is that of accessing exciton delocalization in designer DNA dye aggregate structures for potential development of light-harvesting devices and room-temperature quantum computers. Tuning the hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity of Cy5 dyes in such DNA structures should influence the strength of their excitonic coupling; however, the requisite commercial Cy5 derivatives available for direct incorporation into DNA are nonexistent. Here, we prepare a series of Cy5 derivatives that possess different 5,5′-substituents and detail their incorporation into a set of DNA sequences. In addition to varying dye hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity, the 5,5′-substituents, including hexyloxy, triethyleneglycol monomethyl ether, tert-butyl, and chloro groups were chosen so as to vary the inherent electron-donating/withdrawing character while also tuning their resulting absorption and emission properties. Following the synthesis of parent dyes, one of their pendant alkyl chains was functionalized with a monomethoxytrityl protective group with the remaining hydroxyl-terminated N-propyl linker permitting rapid, same-day phosphoramidite conversion and direct internal DNA incorporation into nascent oligonucleotides with moderate to good yields using a 1 μmole scale automated DNA synthesis. Labeled sequences were cleaved from the controlled pore glass matrix, purified by HPLC, and their photophysical properties were characterized. The DNA-labeled Cy5 derivatives displayed spectroscopic properties that paralleled the parent dyes, with either no change or an increase in fluorescence quantum yield depending upon sequence

    Tuning between Quenching and Energy Transfer in DNA-Templated Heterodimer Aggregates

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    Molecular excitons, which propagate spatially via electronic energy transfer, are central to numerous applications including light harvesting, organic optoelectronics, and nanoscale computing; they may also benefit applications such as photothermal therapy and photoacoustic imaging through the local generation of heat via rapid excited-state quenching. Here we show how to tune between energy transfer and quenching for heterodimers of the same pair of cyanine dyes by altering their spatial configuration on a DNA template. We assemble “transverse” and “adjacent” heterodimers of Cy5 and Cy5.5 using DNA Holliday junctions. We find that the transverse heterodimers exhibit optical properties consistent with excitonically interacting dyes and fluorescence quenching, while the adjacent heterodimers exhibit optical properties consistent with nonexcitonically interacting dyes and disproportionately large Cy5.5 emission, suggestive of energy transfer between dyes. We use transient absorption spectroscopy to show that quenching in the transverse heterodimer occurs via rapid nonradiative decay to the ground state (∼31 ps) and that in the adjacent heterodimer rapid energy transfer from Cy5 to Cy5.5 (∼420 fs) is followed by Cy5.5 excited-state relaxation (∼700 ps). Accessing such drastically different photophysics, which may be tuned on demand for different target applications, highlights the utility of DNA as a template for dye aggregation
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