Nonspecific metal-coordination-driven control over higher-order DNA self-assembly

Abstract

The interactions between chemicals and DNA molecules provide effective regulation tools for dynamically controlling the self-assembly of higher-order DNA nanostructures, which mostly rely on non-covalent π–π stacking, hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions. If strong covalent interactions could be introduced as a new regulation strategy, the current control toolbox in DNA nanotechnology would be greatly enriched. Herein, we adopt the silver ion (Ag+) to demonstrate a general, versatile coordination-driven regulation strategy for higher-order DNA self-assembly and systematically explore the impacts of Ag+ on the assembly and stability of DNA origami and tile-based nanostructures. The kilobase single-stranded scaffold DNA is condensed into uniform nanoparticles by Ag+, therefore inhibiting the formation of DNA origami during thermal annealing. Switchable disassembly and re-assembly of DNA tile-based architectures through Ag+ and cysteine have been proved. The coordination-driven regulation strategy in this work could in principle be expanded to other metal ions, which might bring unique functions and controls to higher-order DNA self-assembly through metal coordination chemistry.

Graphical abstract: Nonspecific metal-coordination-driven control over higher-order DNA self-assembly

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Aug 2024
Accepted
03 Feb 2025
First published
05 Feb 2025

Nanoscale, 2025, Advance Article

Nonspecific metal-coordination-driven control over higher-order DNA self-assembly

M. Wei, Z. Zhu, L. Wan and Y. Li, Nanoscale, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4NR03516J

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