Advanced Materials, volume 33, issue 37, pages 2101986
Double‐ to Single‐Strand Transition Induces Forces and Motion in DNA Origami Nanostructures
Fatih N Gür
1
,
Susanne Kempter
1
,
Florian Schueder
2, 3
,
Christoph Sikeler
1
,
Maximilian Urban
1
,
Ralf Jungmann
1, 2
,
Philipp C Nickels
1
,
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-08-02
Journal:
Advanced Materials
scimago Q1
SJR: 9.191
CiteScore: 43.0
Impact factor: 27.4
ISSN: 09359648, 15214095
PubMed ID:
34337805
General Materials Science
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanics of Materials
Abstract
The design of dynamic, reconfigurable devices is crucial for the bottom-up construction of artificial biological systems. DNA can be used as an engineering material for the de-novo design of such dynamic devices. A self-assembled DNA origami switch is presented that uses the transition from double- to single-stranded DNA and vice versa to create and annihilate an entropic force that drives a reversible conformational change inside the switch. It is distinctively demonstrated that a DNA single-strand that is extended with 0.34 nm per nucleotide – the extension this very strand has in the double-stranded configuration – exerts a contractive force on its ends leading to large-scale motion. The operation of this type of switch is demonstrated via transmission electron microscopy, DNA-PAINT super-resolution microscopy and darkfield microscopy. The work illustrates the intricate and sometimes counter-intuitive forces that act in nanoscale physical systems that operate in fluids.
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