ABSTRACT
The combination of lithographic methods with two-dimensional DNA origami self-assembly has led, among others, to the development of photonic crystal cavity arrays and the exploration of sensing nanoarrays where molecular devices are patterned on the sub-micrometre scale. Here we extend this concept to the third dimension by mounting three-dimensional DNA origami onto nanopatterned substrates, followed by silicification to provide hybrid DNA-silica structures exhibiting mechanical and chemical stability and achieving feature sizes in the sub-10-nm regime. Our versatile and scalable method relying on self-assembly at ambient temperatures offers the potential to three-dimensionally position any inorganic and organic components compatible with DNA origami nanoarchitecture, demonstrated here with gold nanoparticles. This way of nanotexturing could provide a route for the low-cost production of complex and three-dimensionally patterned surfaces and integrated devices designed on the molecular level and reaching macroscopic dimensions.
Subject(s)
Metal Nanoparticles , Nanostructures , Nanotechnology/methods , Gold/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Nanostructures/chemistryABSTRACT
DNA origami has emerged as a powerful molecular breadboard with nanometer resolution that can integrate the world of bottom-up (bio)chemistry with large-scale, macroscopic devices created by top-down lithography. Substituting the top-down patterning with self-assembled colloidal nanoparticles now takes the manufacturing complexity of top-down lithography out of the equation. As a result, the deterministic positioning of single molecules or nanoscale objects on macroscopic arrays is benchtop ready and easily accessible.