Control of Self-Assembly of DNA Tubules Through Integration of Gold Nanoparticles
Scripps Research Institute · Arizona State University
Abstract
The assembly of nanoparticles into three-dimensional (3D) architectures could allow for greater control of the interactions between these particles or with molecules. DNA tubes are known to form through either self-association of multi-helix DNA bundle structures or closing up of 2D DNA tile lattices. By the attachment of single-stranded DNA to gold nanoparticles, nanotubes of various 3D architectures can form, ranging in shape from stacked rings to single spirals, double spirals, and nested spirals. The nanoparticles are active elements that control the preference for specific tube conformations through size-dependent steric repulsion effects. For example, we can control the tube assembly to favor…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
6- JSJaswinder SharmaCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute, Arizona State University
- RCRahul ChhabraCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute, Arizona State University
- ACAnchi Cheng
Scripps Research Institute, Arizona State University
- JBJonathan Brownell
Scripps Research Institute, Arizona State University
- YLYan LiuCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute, Arizona State University
Topics & keywords
- Nanoparticle
- DNA origami
- Colloidal gold
- Helix (gastropod)
- Nanotechnology
- DNA
- Materials science
- Electron tomography