1 research outputs found
Time-Resolved Small-Angle X‑ray Scattering Reveals Millisecond Transitions of a DNA Origami Switch
Self-assembled DNA
structures enable creation of specific shapes
at the nanometer–micrometer scale with molecular resolution.
The construction of functional DNA assemblies will likely require
dynamic structures that can undergo controllable conformational changes.
DNA devices based on shape complementary stacking interactions have
been demonstrated to undergo reversible conformational changes triggered
by changes in ionic environment or temperature. An experimentally
unexplored aspect is how quickly conformational transitions of large
synthetic DNA origami structures can actually occur. Here, we use
time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering to monitor large-scale
conformational transitions of a two-state DNA origami switch in free
solution. We show that the DNA device switches from its open to its
closed conformation upon addition of MgCl<sub>2</sub> in milliseconds,
which is close to the theoretical diffusive speed limit. In contrast,
measurements of the dimerization of DNA origami bricks reveal much
slower and concentration-dependent assembly kinetics. DNA brick dimerization
occurs on a time scale of minutes to hours suggesting that the kinetics
depend on local concentration and molecular alignment