Open Access Article
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High-order structures from nucleic acids for biomedical applications

Alyssa C. Hill * and Jonathan Hall *
Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, ETH Zürich, Switzerland. E-mail: alyssa.hill@pharma.ethz.ch; jonathan.hall@pharma.ethz.ch

Received 14th October 2019 , Accepted 23rd January 2020

First published on 6th February 2020


Abstract

Over the past 40 years, research in the fields of DNA nanotechnology and RNA nanotechnology has taken nucleic acid molecules out of their biological contexts and harnessed their unique base-pairing and self-assembly properties to generate well-defined, organized, and functional supramolecular architectures. Capitalizing on an intrinsic biocompatibility and the ability to tailor size, shape, and functionality from the bottom up, recent work has positioned high-order nucleic acid structures as powerful biomedical tools. This review summarizes advances in nanotechnology that have enabled the fabrication of synthetic nucleic acid structures. Nucleic acid-based platforms for biosensing and therapeutic drug delivery are highlighted. Finally, an outlook that considers the limitations and future challenges for this field is presented.


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Alyssa C. Hill

Alyssa C. Hill graduated in 2013 with a BS (Summa Cum Laude) in microbiology from the University of Oklahoma (USA). She carried out her PhD at the same institution as a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow under the supervision of Prof. Susan Schroeder. In 2017, Alyssa began her postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Jonathan Hall at ETH Zürich (CH) with the support of a grant from the Novartis Research Foundation (Novartis Forschungsstiftung). Her current work is focused on developing unusually stable viral RNA motifs as nucleic acid-based platforms for therapeutic drug delivery.

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Jonathan Hall

Jonathan Hall received his PhD in organic chemistry at Imperial College in London. He completed post-doctoral work with J.-M. Lehn in Strasbourg (FR) and with Y. Kishi in Cambridge (USA). He joined the nucleic acids section at Novartis Pharmaceuticals in Basel in 1992. In the following six years his group established high-throughput oligonucleotide synthesis and genome-wide screening using siRNAs. Working with the neuroscience department his group developed methods to use siRNAs in vivo which resulted in therapeutic effects of siRNAs in clinical models of neuropathic pain via intrathecal delivery. Jonathan Hall became full professor for Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the ETHZ in 2007. From 2012–2014 he was chair of the Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences. Jonathan Hall serves on the steering committee of the Drug Discovery Network Zurich (DDNZ), of which he is a co-founder. The long-term objective of his group is to help bring RNA as a target and a drug into mainstream pharma research by making RNA-targeting ligands more drug-like and by identifying new RNA targets that drive disease mechanisms.


Advances in DNA nanotechnology

DNA junctions

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is well known as the macromolecule that encodes genetic information. Taken out of its biological context, DNA is also an attractive material for bottom-up fabrication. First, the composition of DNA is known. DNA sequences are made up of four nucleotides: adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine (A, C, G, and T, respectively). Second, DNA participates in some of the most predictable interactions of any natural or synthetic molecule.1 Indeed, DNA sequences form hydrogen bonds according to Watson–Crick base pairing rules (i.e., C pairs with G and A pairs with T), and these interactions confer on DNA the capacity for precise molecular recognition and programmable self-assembly.1,2 Finally, the structure of DNA is defined at the nanometer (nm) scale: DNA helices adopt B-form geometry, with 10.5 base pairs (bp) per turn, a diameter of 2 nm, a helical pitch of 3.4 nm, and a persistence length of 50 nm.3 However, in nature, DNA exists predominantly as a duplex with a linear helical axis, which is poorly suited for fabrication in three dimensions (3D).

In 1982, Nadrian Seeman conceived of using branched DNA molecules, or junctions, to assemble DNA structures in 2- and 3D.4 Seeman's inspiration was the Holliday structure, a mobile intermediate of genetic recombination that consists of a single strand exchange, or crossover, between two DNA duplexes. In a seminal publication, Seeman proposed rules for constructing immobile DNA junctions from multiple strands and suggested fitting the junctions with ‘sticky ends’.4 Sticky ends are single-stranded overhangs, and cohesion between sticky ends in DNA generates a helix with standard B-form local geometry.5 By programming DNA junctions to self-assemble via sticky-ended cohesion (Fig. 1A), Seeman imagined the creation of extended DNA arrays, including 2D lattices and 3D crystals.4 Seeman's vision was that DNA crystals with embedded recognition motifs could be used as hosts to organize proteins and other macromolecule guests for structure determination by X-ray crystallography (Fig. 1B).4 In the years following Seeman's innovative proposal, a variety of DNA structures were created, including multi-way junctions,6,7 geometric shapes,8 knots9,10 (Fig. 1C), Borromean rings11 (Fig. 1D), and polyhedra12,13 (Fig. 1E and F), and thus the field of structural DNA nanotechnology was established.


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Fig. 1 DNA junctions as units of assembly in extended DNA arrays and discrete DNA topologies. (A) A DNA four-way junction with sticky ends self-assembles into a 2D DNA lattice. (B) A 3D DNA crystal (black) scaffolds proteins (blue) for structure determination by X-ray crystallography. (C) A DNA trefoil knot. (D) Borromean rings made of DNA. (E) A DNA cube. (F) A DNA octahedron. Panels (A) and (B) reprinted from ref. 1 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Reviews Materials. Copyright 2017. Panels (C–F) reprinted from ref. 14 by permission from Elsevier: Trends in Biotechnology. Copyright 1999.

DNA tiles

While early work in the field of DNA nanotechnology demonstrated that target topologies could be generated by manipulating flexible junctions, the creation of specific 2- and 3D geometries hinged on the development of more rigid motifs.15 To this end, a variety of DNA ‘tiles’ with high structural integrity have been developed.16 One notable example is the double-crossover (DX) tile.17 In contrast to the Holliday junction, which features one crossover between two DNA duplexes, the DX tile features two crossovers (Fig. 2A). Accordingly, the DX tile has a stiffness that is twice that of linear, double-stranded DNA.18 DX tiles with sticky ends have been shown to self-assemble into periodic19 and aperiodic20 2D lattices (Fig. 2A). Further research has produced triple crossover (TX)21 and paranemic crossover (PX)22 tiles, multi-point stars23–25 (Fig. 2B–D), double-decker tiles26 (Fig. 2E), T-junctions27 (Fig. 2F), Wang tiles,28 and other tiles for assembling DNA lattices of varying patterns and periodicities, 3D DNA objects with controlled sizes29 (Fig. 2G), and even DNA-based nano-mechanical devices.30,31
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Fig. 2 DNA tiles and tile-based structures. (A) Double-crossover (DX) tile (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the DX tile (right). Scale bar: 150 nm. (B) Three-point star motif (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the three-point star motif (right). Scale bar: 50 nm. (C) Four-point star motif (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the four-point star motif (right). Scale bar: 50 nm. (D) Six-point star motif (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the six-point star motif (right). Scale bar: 50 nm. (E) Double-decker tile (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the double-decker tile (right). Scale bar: 200 nm. (F) T-junction (left) and a periodic DNA lattice self-assembled from the T-junction (right). Scale bar: 25 nm. (G) Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reconstructed models of DNA polyhedra self-assembled from the three-point star motif. Top panel: DNA tetrahedron, middle panel: DNA dodecahedron, bottom panel: DNA buckyball. Scale bars: 5 nm, 20 nm, and 20 nm, respectively. (H) Tensegrity triangle (left) and DNA crystals self-assembled from the tensegrity triangle (right). Scale bar: 500 µm. Panel (A) tile reprinted from ref. 41 by permission from Springer Nature: Methods in Molecular Biology. Copyright 2005. Panel (A) lattice reprinted from ref. 19 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 1998. Panel (B) reprinted with permission from ref. 24. Copyright 2005 American Chemical Society. Panel (C) from ref. 23. Reprinted with permission from AAAS. Panel (D) reprinted with permission from ref. 25. Copyright 2006 American Chemical Society. Panel (E) reprinted with permission from ref. 26. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society. Panel (F) reprinted with permission from ref. 27. Copyright 2009 John Wiley and Sons. Panel (G) reprinted from ref. 29 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 2008. Panel (H) reprinted from ref. 33 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 2009.

Additionally, in 2009, Seeman's group used a tile known as the tensegrity triangle to produce the first rationally designed, self-assembled DNA crystal.32,33 In the tensegrity triangle, seven oligonucleotide strands come together to form a structure comprising three struts and three four-way junction vertices, while two-nucleotide sticky ends mediate self-assembly in 3D (Fig. 2H).32,33 The development of self-assembling DNA crystals constituted an important step toward realizing Seeman's aforementioned vision for the field of DNA nanotechnology. However, the crystals diffracted to only 4 Å resolution.33 Similarly, self-assembling DNA crystals designed to contain two tensegrity triangles per asymmetric unit diffracted to only 5 Å resolution.34 In recent years, improvements to resolution and crystal stability have been made by incorporating 5′ terminal phosphates into certain component DNA strands,35 by changing the length36 and composition37 of the sticky ends, and by introducing additional stabilizing DNA strands,38 crosslinks,39 and covalent bonds.40 However, further improvements to resolution will be necessary in order to maximize the utility of DNA crystals as tools for macromolecular structure determination by X-ray crystallography.

DNA origami

In a 2003 publication, Yan et al. described the creation of DNA lattices from DX tiles self-assembled around long (∼300 nucleotide; nt) strands of DNA.20 The following year, Shih et al. reported a DNA octahedron self-assembled from a 1.7 kilobase (kb) strand of DNA and five 40-nt strands.42 Inspired by these advances, in 2006 Paul Rothemund generalized the approach into a method called DNA origami, which consists of folding a large ‘scaffold’ strand of DNA with many short ‘staple’ strands in order to generate defined shapes of arbitrary complexity.43 Specifically, designs are created by raster-filling a shape with the scaffold strand and using staple strands that base pair to the scaffold to hold it in place (Fig. 3A).43 In a now-famous publication, Rothemund folded the ∼7 kb M13 bacteriophage genome with over 200 32-nt DNA strands into rectangles, stars, and smiley faces (Fig. 3B).43 Rothemund's technique revolutionized the field by achieving high yields of the designed structures while simultaneously avoiding requirements for the purification of component strands, multiple assembly steps, and exact stoichiometries.43
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Fig. 3 2- and 3D DNA origami shapes. (A) Scaffolded DNA origami: the folding of a long scaffold strand of DNA (black) into a defined 2D shape is accomplished with the help of short staple strands (colors). (B) Complex 2D shapes folded using scaffolded DNA origami. Images are 165 nm × 165 nm. (C) Schematic representation (left) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images (right) of a DNA square-tooth gear. Scale bars: 20 nm. (D) Schematic representations of a DNA sphere (top left) and flask (bottom left) and TEM images of the sphere (top right) and flask (bottom right). Scale bars: 50 nm. (E) Illustration of a DNA origami box with a controllable lid. (F) Complex 2D shapes self-assembled from single-stranded DNA tiles. Images are 150 nm × 150 nm. (G) 3D DNA shapes self-assembled from DNA bricks. Each shape is 25 × 25 × 27 nm. (H) Atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of single-stranded DNA origami hearts. Scale bars: left panel, 50 nm; right panel, 200 nm. Panels (A) and (B) reprinted from ref. 43 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 2006. Panel (C) from ref. 46. Reprinted with permission from AAAS. Panel (D) from ref. 47. Reprinted with permission from AAAS. Panel (E) reprinted from ref. 48 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 2009. Panel (F) reprinted from ref. 49 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature. Copyright 2012. Panel (G) from ref. 50. Reprinted with permission from AAAS. Panel (H) from ref. 53. Reprinted with permission from AAAS.

Follow-on research extended Rothemund's design principles into 3D with impressive results. Using DNA origami, Ke et al. created DNA cages,44 and Douglas et al. created DNA monoliths, bridges, and crosses.45 Other studies generated 3D structures that twist and curve at the nano-scale. For example, Dietz et al. produced DNA beach balls and square-tooth gears46 (Fig. 3C), and Han et al. produced DNA spheres, shells, and flasks (Fig. 3D).47 A particularly notable example of 3D DNA origami was reported in a publication by Andersen et al., who used the M13 bacteriophage genome as a scaffold to create fully addressable, self-assembling DNA boxes.48 Each box measured 42 × 36 × 36 nm and was folded from six interconnected sheets of DNA with 220 staple strands bridging the edges.48 Furthermore, by programming the lids of these boxes with DNA ‘locks’, the authors showed that they could control their opening with externally supplied DNA ‘keys’ (Fig. 3E).48 In this case, the locks comprised DNA duplexes with sticky ends that facilitated toehold-mediated strand displacement by auxiliary DNA strands.

Variations on DNA origami

More recent work has produced variations on the DNA origami technique. For example, Wei et al. developed a 42-nt single-stranded DNA tile that self-assembles into complex 2D patterns, including alphanumeric characters, punctuation marks, and smiley faces, without the need for a scaffold strand (Fig. 3F).49 A recent publication from the same group showed that 32-nt single-stranded DNA tiles, or ‘bricks’, self-assemble into prescribed 3D shapes with up to 10[thin space (1/6-em)]000 unique components (Fig. 3G).50,51 Another recent study using DNA bricks generated polyhedral assemblies with atomic masses up to 1.2 gigadaltons and long, thick tubes similar in size to some bacilli.52 Because they do not require a scaffold strand, these approaches contrast with Rothemund's ‘scaffolded’ DNA origami. A separate approach is single-stranded origami, which folds multi-kilobase nucleic acid strands into complex 2D patterns without using staple strands. In one example, Han et al. folded hearts from a single strand of DNA approximately 3000 nt in length (Fig. 3H).53 Another recent example described the combination of single-stranded origami with DNA tiles to fold highly knotted 2- and 3D topologies.54 Since the advent of DNA origami, semi-automated55,56 and fully-automated57,58 approaches for producing target 2- and 3D geometries have emerged. Today, the ease of the origami technique, combined with the commercial availability of chemically synthesized DNA sequences,59 makes the design and fabrication of complex DNA structures accessible even to non-specialists.1

Emergence of RNA nanotechnology

In parallel with developments in DNA nanotechnology, the last two decades have witnessed the emergence of the field of ribonucleic acid (RNA) nanotechnology.60,61 Owing to its 2′-hydroxyl group, RNA is more chemically labile than DNA,62 but it nevertheless has several desirable features for nano-scale fabrication. Like DNA, RNA comprises four nucleotides: adenine, cytosine, guanine, and uracil (A, C, G, and U, respectively). It is highly programmable, with molecular recognition and self-assembly properties governed by canonical Watson–Crick interactions (i.e., C:G and A:U). However, unlike DNA, RNA also engages in many non-canonical interactions (e.g., G:U wobble pairs, sheared G:A pairs, reverse Hoogsteen pairs, and G:A imino pairs),63,64 which permit the formation of a breathtaking range of complex 3D structures and the execution of catalytic and recognition functions that rival the activities of proteins.65,66 Indeed, in nature, messenger RNA (mRNA), transfer RNA (tRNA), and ribosomal RNA (rRNA) have active roles in protein synthesis.67–70 Additionally, ribozymes, riboswitches, small RNAs, and long, noncoding RNAs are central players in genome replication, intron splicing, regulation of gene expression, epigenetic modification and scaffolding, and more.66

Moreover, RNA structure is organized on the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels. Primary structure is simply the nucleotide sequence of an RNA molecule. Secondary structure comprises recurrent motifs such as helices, hairpins, bulges, internal loops, and multi-way junctions, and tertiary structure comprises noncovalent interactions that connect these motifs together in 3D.71 Hierarchical folding confers modularity on all levels of RNA structure.72 Therefore, RNA designers can shop the natural repertoire and mix and match different structural and functional elements (‘modules’) in order to create composite RNA structures with tailored functionalities.73 These features, combined with the groundwork laid by research in the field of DNA nanotechnology and advances in chemical RNA synthesis,74 have enabled the construction of a wide variety of synthetic RNA structures. Important advances in the field of RNA nanotechnology are summarized below.

RNA tectonics

In 1996, Westhof et al. proposed ‘RNA tectonics’ to describe the idea that RNA can be resolved into and reassembled from component modules, like a 3D mosaic.75 A few years later, Jaeger and Leontis put this idea into practice by generating synthetic ‘tectoRNA’ units using a hairpin tetraloop and a tetraloop receptor extracted from the Tetrahymena thermophila group I intron.76 Their pioneering work showed that the rational placement of interacting loops and loop-receptors could direct the self-assembly of RNA dimers and 1D arrays.76 Further studies revealed that the self-assembly behavior of tectoRNAs could be fine-tuned by changing the length, helical twist, and flexibility of the linker between interacting motifs.77 Additionally, by modifying the loop:loop-receptor system with a four-way junction derived from the hairpin ribozyme, Nasalean et al. later demonstrated the self-assembly of long, micrometer-scale RNA structures that resemble actin filaments from the protein world (Fig. 4A).78
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Fig. 4 Self-assembled RNA structures. (A) Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of RNA filaments self-assembled from tectoRNAs. Scale bars: 400 nm. (B) Views of a cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reconstructed model of a tRNA polyhedron. (C) 3D model of a hexagonal ring based on the RNAI/IIi kissing complex from E. coli. (D) Cryo-EM reconstructed models of three different RNA cages self-assembled from engineered pRNA. Scale bars: 3 nm. (E) Sequences (left) and a 3D computational model (right) of an RNA tetrahedron with pRNA 3WJ vertices (red). (F) Atomic force microscopy (AFM) image of a periodic RNA lattice self-assembled from the RNA DX tile. Scale bar: 25 nm. (G) Computational model (left) and a cryo-EM reconstructed model (right) of an octameric prism self-assembled from an RNA T-junction. Scale bar: 5 nm. (H) 3D model of an RNA double square (left) and an AFM image of double squares in cell lysates from E. coli (right). Scale bar: 20 nm. Panel (A) reprinted from ref. 78 by permission of Oxford University Press. Panel (B) reprinted from ref. 81 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Chemistry. Copyright 2010. Panel (C) reprinted with permission from ref. 84. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society. Panel (D) reprinted from ref. 96 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Communications. Copyright 2014. Panel (E) reprinted with permission from ref. 106. Copyright 2016 John Wiley and Sons. Panel (F) reprinted from ref. 115 by permission of Oxford University Press. Panel (G) reprinted from ref. 116 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Communications. Copyright 2015. Panel (H) reprinted from ref. 122.

Using a different approach, Horiya et al. showed that kissing loops taken from the genome of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) could mediate the formation of large RNA assemblies.79 Kissing loops are short hairpin loops that base pair, and their interactions have been shown to be 102–104 times more stable than loop:loop-receptor interactions.79 Chworos et al. combined HIV kissing loops with a right angle motif conserved in rRNA to generate RNA squares, square patterns, and finite grids of defined size and shape.80 In a separate study, a five-way junction derived from class II tRNA was engineered with HIV kissing loops to generate self-assembling, thermostable RNA polyhedra (Fig. 4B).81 Using 5′-biotinylated tectoRNAs, the authors of this study further illustrated a remarkable degree of spatial control by directing the precise positioning and encapsulation of streptavidins within the RNA structures.81

Yet other studies have adapted a kissing complex from Escherichia coli (E. coli) with a 120° bend to generate multimeric RNA rings with potential drug delivery applications (Fig. 4C).82–84 Notably, these circularized RNA assemblies show increased resistance to ribonucleases relative to their linear RNA counterparts.84 Recent work by Geary et al. has generalized the RNA tectonics approach by composing a ‘syntax’ of structural modules, including kissing loops, tail–tail interactions, triple helices, bulges, and three- and five-way junctions.85 Using this syntax, the authors demonstrated the formation of various RNA shapes, including polygons, ladders, grids, and even hearts85 that together provide a glimpse into the versatility of RNA as a medium for generating complex nanostructures.

Engineering of viral pRNA

Alongside tectoRNAs, another molecule that has significantly shaped the current RNA nanotechnology landscape is prohead or packaging RNA (pRNA).60,61 pRNA is a naturally-occurring RNA molecule that derives from the phi29 bacteriophage and related bacteriophages in the phi29-like family.86 Full-length pRNA is approximately 170 nt long,87 and it has a conserved secondary structure that features six helical regions, a three-way junction (3WJ), and two kissing loops that mediate pRNA self-assembly in the context of a DNA packaging motor, where pRNA performs an essential but yet unknown function.87–89 In 1998, Guo et al. demonstrated that the prototype phi29 pRNA sequence self-assembles in vitro.90 More recent studies on phylogenetically related pRNAs have shown that in vitro self-assembly behavior varies by sequence and depends on the nucleotide composition at the 3WJ.91–93 Engineering of phi29 pRNA has yielded self-assembling RNA dimers, trimers, and arrays in vitro.94,95 The ability to control pRNA self-assembly also has enabled the creation of RNA cages96 (Fig. 4D) and possible vectors for drug delivery.97,98 Recent work has narrowed engineering efforts to the unusually stable 3WJ motif found within the pRNA structure.99–101 The phi29 pRNA 3WJ has been used to construct RNA polygons,102–105 tetrahedra106 (Fig. 4E), and prisms.107 Other studies have developed the 3WJ into a promising platform for the delivery of therapeutic cargoes.108–113 To date, only the phi29 pRNA sequence has been developed for RNA nanotechnology. Related or engineered pRNA sequences with different thermodynamic,100 conformational,93 and self-assembly91,92 properties may prove useful for tailoring the features of pRNA-based structures for specific applications.

RNA tiles and RNA origami

As described above, a host of synthetic RNA structures have been engineered by exploiting RNA motifs found in nature. A different approach relies on the de novo design of RNA motifs analogous to the tiles used in DNA nanotechnology. For example, Afonin et al. have demonstrated the self-assembly of RNA PX tiles,114 and Stewart et al. have shown that RNA DX tiles self-assemble into periodic lattices on the micrometer scale (Fig. 4F).115 Moreover, Yu et al. have employed RNA T-junctions in the fabrication of self-assembling octameric prisms (Fig. 4G).116 Another technique that has been developed for RNA nanotechnology is origami. In a recent study, Han et al. demonstrated that single-stranded DNA origami could be adapted for RNA by taking into account the difference in helical periodicity between DNA and RNA molecules.53 Using the adapted technique, the authors were able to produce structures such as rectangles, rhombuses, and hearts from RNA sequences up to 6.3 kb in length.53 In another recent study, Qi et al. combined RNA PX tiles with single-stranded origami to fold intricately knotted 2D RNA structures up to 7.5 kb in length.54

Co-transcriptionally folded RNA structures

RNA folding is fast on the timescale of transcription.117 Therefore, one exciting prospect for the field of RNA nanotechnology is encoding RNA structures as DNA and subsequently expressing them in vitro or in vivo. In one example, Afonin et al. showed that rationally designed RNA cubes self-assemble from six or 10 component strands during in vitro transcription.118 In another example, Afonin et al. showed that RNA rings and cubes co-transcriptionally assemble from up to 22 different component strands in vitro.119 An artful study by Geary et al. combined principles of origami with tiles, hairpins, and kissing loops to create hexagonal RNA lattices that co-transcriptionally fold and self-assemble in vitro.120 Other studies have extended these principles into living systems. For example, Delebecque et al. co-transcriptionally assembled RNA scaffolds in E. coli that were capable of organizing proteins in a hydrogen-producing biosynthetic pathway.121 More recently, Li et al. showed that an RNA double square design could be cloned, expressed, and folded in E. coli (Fig. 4H).122 Compared to conventional origami techniques, the gene expression of RNA assemblies avoids costly chemical synthesis as well as lengthy annealing steps120 and moves the field a step closer to one of the holy grails of RNA nanotechnology, i.e., rationally designing RNA objects as large and complex as natural RNA machines.123

Biomedical applications

As described above, numerous advances in nucleic acid nanotechnology have contributed to the development of supramolecular DNA and RNA assemblies with precise structural and dynamic control. Here, we highlight examples of high-order nucleic acid structures in two promising biomedical applications: biosensing and therapeutic drug delivery.

Biosensing

Biosensors are tools that convert signals from biological analytes (e.g., cells, proteins, nucleic acids, and small metabolites) into recordable signals. They consist of a recognition component (i.e., a probe), a transducer, and a signal amplification device.124 One challenge in biosensing is facilitating maximum interactions between analytes and probes while preventing agglomeration due to an irregular distribution of probes across a sensing surface.124 Rationally designed DNA tetrahedra have proven particularly useful for addressing this problem. DNA tetrahedra are mechanically robust structures that self-assemble rapidly and in nearly quantitative yields from four component strands.125,126 In 2010, Pei et al. developed a sensitive electrochemical biosensor using DNA tetrahedra assembled from three DNA strands bearing a terminal thiol group (–SH) and one DNA strand containing a probe.127 The tetrahedra self-assembled on a gold (Au) electrode by Au–S chemistry and were shown to enforce uniform probe-to-probe spacing.127 Additionally, tetrahedra with pendant DNA probes showed a lower detection limit for target DNA of approximately 1 picomolar (pM), which represented a 250-fold improvement over the same probe without tetrahedron scaffolding.127 Moreover, aptamers are synthetic nucleic acid sequences that are evolved to bind a user-specified target ligand with high affinity using a process known as systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX).128,129 Replacement of the pendant DNA probe with a DNA aptamer enabled the detection of thrombin, a potential tumor marker, with a lower detection limit of 100 pM, or three orders of magnitude lower than the detection limit for the aptamer alone.127

New work has shown that DNA tetrahedra functionalized with antibodies can detect other disease biomarkers, including tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α),130 a well-known tumor marker, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA),131 a biomarker for prostate cancer. Yet other DNA tetrahedra have been developed for detecting microRNAs (miRNAs).132–136 In one particularly notable example, Wen et al. showed that a DNA tetrahedron-based biosensor could discriminate human let-7 sequences with single nucleotide variations.132 The same system equipped with a different probe could detect the cancer-associated miRNA-21 on the attomolar range.132 Furthermore, using DNA tetrahedra, Zhou et al. were able to detect MCF-7 breast cancer cells.137 Lin et al. since have developed a protocol for the fabrication of DNA tetrahedron-based biosensors for small molecule, nucleic acid, protein, and whole cell detection (Fig. 5A).138 Recent studies have further shown that DNA tetrahedron-based biosensors can detect RNAs,139–142 proteins,143 small molecules,144 and metal ions145 inside living cells.


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Fig. 5 High-order nucleic acid structures for biosensing and drug delivery. (A) A DNA tetrahedron-based biosensing platform for the detection of cells, proteins, nucleic acids, and small molecules. (B) Strands of DNA and siRNA self-assemble into an siRNA-functionalized DNA tetrahedron. (C) A DNA nanosuitcase is triggered to release encapsulated siRNA cargo (green) by a specific miRNA sequence. (D) A DNA origami nanorobot is loaded with thrombin (magenta) and functionalized with nucleolin-binding aptamers (green). (E) Strands of RNA self-assemble into an siRNA-functionalized RNA cube. Processing by Dicer (‘Dicing’) releases siRNAs from the cube. (F) An RNA pyramid with photocleavable drug cargo. (G) An RNA tetrahedron functionalized with aptamers (red, blue, and green) and a ribozyme (purple). Panel (A) reprinted from ref. 138 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Protocols. Copyright 2016. Panel (B) reprinted from ref. 157 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Nanotechnology. Copyright 2012. Panel (C) reprinted with permission from ref. 162. Copyright 2016 American Chemical Society. Panel (D) reprinted from ref. 164 by permission from Springer Nature: Nature Biotechnology. Copyright 2018. Panel (E) reprinted with permission from ref. 168, DOI: http://10.1021/nn504508s. Panel (F) reprinted from ref. 169 with permission from Springer Nature: Nano Research. Copyright 2019. Panel (G) reprinted with permission from ref. 106. Copyright 2016 John Wiley and Sons.

Drug delivery

Owing to their intrinsic biocompatibility, nucleic acids also hold promise as platforms for therapeutic drug delivery. In 2006, Erben et al. illustrated the potential of DNA structures to serve as molecular containers for therapeutic cargo by loading cytochrome c into a self-assembled DNA tetrahedron.146 Follow-on research showed that DNA tetrahedra are stable to enzymatic degradation,147 and DNA tetrahedra,148 icosahedra,149 and cages150 may be reconfigured in response to external signals for controlled drug release. Furthermore, many studies have demonstrated that DNA structures are taken up by cultured cells without transfection reagents.151–154 Recently, Wiraja et al. tested a variety of nano-scale DNA structures, including tetrahedra, cylindrical rods, rectangles, and triangles, and showed that highly-ordered structures smaller than 75 nm penetrate the skin.155 Using a mouse model of melanoma, the study further showed that DNA tetrahedra loaded with the chemotherapeutic drug doxorubicin could achieve over 2-fold higher drug accumulation and tumor inhibition relative to topically applied doxorubicin and liposome- or nanoparticle-formulated doxorubicin.155

While some DNA structures achieve passive uptake, other platforms have been developed with active targeting mechanisms to promote uptake by specific populations of cells. In one example, Chang et al. showed that DNA icosahedra self-assembled from five- and six-point star motifs could be functionalized with a MUC 1 aptamer for targeted delivery of doxorubicin to MUC 1+ MCF-7 breast cancer cells.156 In a separate, pioneering study, Lee et al. developed a DNA tetrahedron with a small interfering RNA (siRNA) hybridized to each edge (Fig. 5B).157 SiRNAs are short, double-stranded RNA molecules that elicit potent gene silencing by co-opting an endogenous RNA interference (RNAi) pathway.158 Currently, major challenges for the delivery of oligonucleotide drugs such as siRNAs include nuclease protection, systemic delivery, and targeted cellular uptake.159 Notably, siRNA-functionalized tetrahedra administered in a mouse tumor xenograft model displayed longer half-lives in blood circulation relative to siRNAs alone.157 Additionally, tetrahedra with siRNAs bearing folate distributed to several tissues but accumulated in folate receptor-overexpressing KB cells, where they efficiently silenced a luciferase reporter.157 In line with these results, other studies have shown that DNA structures can confer stability on their therapeutic payloads while also maintaining or even improving their therapeutic efficacies.160,161

Yet other DNA platforms have been developed with sophisticated mechanisms for cargo release. In a recent example, Bujold et al. designed DNA ‘nanosuitcases’ that encapsulate siRNA and release it in the presence of specific mRNA or miRNA triggers (Fig. 5C).162 In another example, Douglas et al. developed DNA origami ‘nanorobots’ with AND logic gates.163 These logic gates consisted of two aptamer ‘locks’ that triggered a drastic reconfiguration of the robot and exposed molecular payloads upon binding both antigenic ‘keys’.163 Recent work by Li et al. combined both active targeting and controlled release mechanisms in a DNA nanorobot loaded with thrombin and functionalized with nucleolin-binding aptamers (Fig. 5D).164 Thrombin is a protease that induces coagulation and may be useful for starving tumors of nutrients and oxygen by selective occlusion of tumor blood vessels.164 Nucleolin is a protein that is expressed on tumor-associated endothelial cells.165 Remarkably, the nanorobots were capable of depositing thrombin at tumor cells in mouse models of breast cancer, and they also proved safe and immunologically inert in both mice and miniature pigs.164

Several high-order RNA structures also have been developed for therapeutic drug delivery. Because RNA is more chemically labile than DNA, RNA-based platforms often are chemically modified to improve their stability under physiological conditions. Common modifications include substitutions at the 2′ position of ribose as well as in the internucleotide linkage.159 A series of studies has developed RNA cubes designed in silico118 as a promising platform for drug delivery. The cubes are precisely controlled in terms of size, shape, and composition; they can be chemically modified for downstream applications; and they also are capable of self-assembly in isothermal conditions during in vitro transcription or from several short strands following chemical RNA synthesis.118,119 Computational and experimental analyses have shown that cube designs with 10 bp per edge and single-stranded regions in the corners are not strained and assemble efficiently.166 In 2011, Afonin et al. developed a protocol for the design and self-assembly of siRNA-functionalized RNA cubes using processes that are fully automatable.167 The cubes interact with recombinant human Dicer in vitro to produce siRNAs167 (Fig. 5E). Furthermore, a recent study by Afonin et al. showed that siRNA-functionalized RNA cubes are capable of triggering RNAi in GFP-expressing MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells and reducing HIV-1 production in HeLa cells.168

Finally, another promising platform for drug delivery has come from research on pRNA and its thermodynamically stable 3WJ.60,61 The phi29 pRNA 3WJ has been engineered to deliver a variety of therapeutic agents, including small molecules,108 miRNAs,109 anti-miRNAs,110,111 and siRNAs.99,112,113 In a recent example, Xu et al. combined the phi29 pRNA 3WJ with a four-way junction derived from the hairpin ribozyme to generate 2′-deoxyfluoro U/C modified RNA pyramids (Fig. 5F).169 These pyramids were functionalized with the chemotherapeutic drug paclitaxel via photocleavable spacers, and irradiation with ultraviolet light induced drug release and cytotoxicity in MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells.169 In a different example, Li et al. reported the self-assembly of a nuclease-resistant, 2′-deoxyfluoro U/C modified RNA tetrahedron based on the phi29 pRNA 3WJ (Fig. 5G).106 Functionalization of the tetrahedron with ribozymes, aptamers, and siRNAs did not disrupt its structure, and the functional modules retained the capacity for ribozymatic cleavage, ligand binding, and gene knockdown in vitro.106 Furthermore, this study showed that tetrahedra functionalized with an aptamer against epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and an siRNA were capable of internalizing into tumor tissue and silencing a luciferase reporter in a mouse model of breast cancer.106

Outlook

From the development of DNA junctions, tiles, and origami in DNA nanotechnology to the development of tectoRNAs, engineered pRNA, and co-transcriptionally folded structures in RNA nanotechnology, research over the past 40 years has expanded the possibilities for creating supramolecular nucleic acid architectures with precise structural and dynamic control. Today, high-order DNA and RNA structures are taking their place as powerful tools with promising biomedical applications. In biosensing, nano-structured DNA platforms boost sensitivity for the detection of biological analytes while preventing agglomeration. In drug delivery, DNA- and RNA-based platforms offer potential solutions to formidable in vivo challenges, including nuclease protection, systemic delivery, and targeted cellular uptake for oligonucleotide drugs. Many of the achievements in nucleic acid nanotechnology would not be possible without parallel achievements in chemical DNA and RNA synthesis, which have given ready access to the oligonucleotide sequences necessary for constructing nucleic acid assemblies.1 Still, for bottom-up fabrication using RNA, sequence length and yield are considerable limitations. RNA assemblies made by gene expression may circumvent these issues and facilitate applications in vivo. Additionally, the cost of oligonucleotide synthesis is decreasing. In fact, a relative of Moore's law has been reported for the effective cost of DNA, which is halved every 30 months.170 Continued developments in oligonucleotide synthesis, including in the production of longer sequences for lower costs, will be important for supporting efforts in DNA and RNA nanotechnology and for realizing the extraordinary potential of high-order nucleic acid structures for biomedical applications and beyond.

Conflicts of interest

A. C. H. is a co-inventor and applicant on a patent for viral pRNA 3WJ sequences.

Acknowledgements

A. C. H. was supported by a Novartis FreeNovation grant from the Novartis Research Foundation (Novartis Forschungsstiftung).

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