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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 52(W1): W13-W18, 2024 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38747339

ABSTRACT

DNAforge is an online tool that provides a unified, user-friendly interface to several recent design methods for DNA and RNA wireframe nanostructures, with the possibility of integrating additional methods into the same framework. Currently, DNAforge supports three design methods for DNA nanostructures and two for RNA nanostructures. The tool enables the design, visualisation and sequence generation for highly complex wireframe nanostructures with a simple fully automated process. DNAforge is freely accessible at https://dnaforge.org/.


Subject(s)
DNA , Nanostructures , RNA , Software , Nanostructures/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Nucleic Acid Conformation
2.
ACS Nano ; 16(10): 16608-16616, 2022 10 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36178116

ABSTRACT

We address the problem of de novo design and synthesis of nucleic acid nanostructures, a challenge that has been considered in the area of DNA nanotechnology since the 1980s and more recently in the area of RNA nanotechnology. Toward this goal, we introduce a general algorithmic design process and software pipeline for rendering 3D wireframe polyhedral nanostructures in single-stranded RNA. To initiate the pipeline, the user creates a model of the desired polyhedron using standard 3D graphic design software. As its output, the pipeline produces an RNA nucleotide sequence whose corresponding RNA primary structure can be transcribed from a DNA template and folded in the laboratory. As case examples, we design and characterize experimentally three 3D RNA nanostructures: a tetrahedron, a triangular bipyramid, and a triangular prism. The design software is openly available and also provides an export of the targeted 3D structure into the oxDNA molecular dynamics simulator for easy simulation and visualization.


Subject(s)
Nanostructures , RNA , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Nanotechnology , Nanostructures/chemistry , DNA/chemistry
3.
ACS Nano ; 12(9): 9291-9299, 2018 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30188123

ABSTRACT

DNA origami is a powerful method for the creation of 3D nanoscale objects, and in the past few years, interest in wireframe origami designs has increased due to their potential for biomedical applications. In DNA wireframe designs, the construction material is double-stranded DNA, which has a persistence length of around 50 nm. In this work, we study the effect of various design choices on the stiffness versus final size of nanoscale wireframe rods, given the constraints on origami designs set by the DNA origami scaffold size. An initial theoretical analysis predicts two competing mechanisms limiting rod stiffness, whose balancing results in an optimal edge length. For small edge lengths, the bending of the rod's overall frame geometry is the dominant factor, while the flexibility of individual DNA edges has a greater contribution at larger edge lengths. We evaluate our design choices through simulations and experiments and find that the stiffness of the structures increases with the number of sides in the cross-section polygon and that there are indications of an optimal member edge length. We also ascertain the effect of nicked DNA edges on the stiffness of the wireframe rods and demonstrate that ligation of the staple breakpoint nicks reduces the observed flexibility. Our simulations also indicate that the persistence length of wireframe DNA structures significantly decreases with increasing monovalent salt concentration.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , DNA/chemical synthesis , Nanotechnology , Nucleic Acid Conformation
4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(31): 8869-72, 2016 07 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27304204

ABSTRACT

The use of DNA as a nanoscale construction material has been a rapidly developing field since the 1980s, in particular since the introduction of scaffolded DNA origami in 2006. Although software is available for DNA origami design, the user is generally limited to architectures where finding the scaffold path through the object is trivial. Herein, we demonstrate the automated conversion of arbitrary two-dimensional sheets in the form of digital meshes into scaffolded DNA nanostructures. We investigate the properties of DNA meshes based on three different internal frameworks in standard folding buffer and physiological salt buffers. We then employ the triangulated internal framework and produce four 2D structures with complex outlines and internal features. We demonstrate that this highly automated technique is capable of producing complex DNA nanostructures that fold with high yield to their programmed configurations, covering around 70 % more surface area than classic origami flat sheets.


Subject(s)
Computer-Aided Design , DNA/chemical synthesis , Nanostructures/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Software
5.
Nature ; 523(7561): 441-4, 2015 Jul 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26201596

ABSTRACT

It was suggested more than thirty years ago that Watson-Crick base pairing might be used for the rational design of nanometre-scale structures from nucleic acids. Since then, and especially since the introduction of the origami technique, DNA nanotechnology has enabled increasingly more complex structures. But although general approaches for creating DNA origami polygonal meshes and design software are available, there are still important constraints arising from DNA geometry and sense/antisense pairing, necessitating some manual adjustment during the design process. Here we present a general method of folding arbitrary polygonal digital meshes in DNA that readily produces structures that would be very difficult to realize using previous approaches. The design process is highly automated, using a routeing algorithm based on graph theory and a relaxation simulation that traces scaffold strands through the target structures. Moreover, unlike conventional origami designs built from close-packed helices, our structures have a more open conformation with one helix per edge and are therefore stable under the ionic conditions usually used in biological assays.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Algorithms , Base Pairing , Buffers , Cryoelectron Microscopy , DNA/chemical synthesis , DNA/ultrastructure , Nanostructures/ultrastructure
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