DNA-templated peptide assembly

EUROPEAN BIOPHYSICS JOURNAL WITH BIOPHYSICS LETTERS 46 (2017) S303-S303

Authors:

J Jin, EG Baker, J Bath, DN Woolfson, AJ Turberfield

Quantitative single molecule surface-enhanced Raman scattering by optothermal tuning of DNA origami-assembled plasmonic nanoantennas

ACS Nano American Chemical Society 10:11 (2016) 9809-9815

Authors:

Sabrina Simoncelli, Eva-Maria Roller, Patrick Urban, Robert Schreiber, Andrew J Turberfield, Tim Liedl, Theobald Lohmueller

Abstract:

DNA origami is a powerful approach for assembling plasmonic nanoparticle dimers and Raman dyes with high yields and excellent positioning control. Here we show how optothermal induced shrinking of a DNA origami template can be employed to control the gap sizes between two 40 nm gold nanoparticles in a range of 1 nm – 2 nm. The high field confinement achieved with this optothermal approach was demonstrated by detection of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) signals from single molecules that are precisely placed within the DNA origami template that spans the nanoparticle gap. By comparing the SERS intensity with respect to the field enhancement in the plasmonic hotspot region, we found good agreement between measurement and theory. Our straightforward approach for the fabrication of addressable plasmonic nanosensors by DNA origami demonstrates a path toward future sensing applications with single-molecule resolution.

Ordering gold nanoparticles with DNA origami nanoflowers

ACS Nano American Chemical Society 10:8 (2016) 7303-7306

Authors:

Andrew Turberfield, Robert Schreiber, Arzhang Ardavan, Ibon Santiago

Abstract:

Nanostructured materials, including plasmonic metamaterials made from gold and silver nanoparticles, provide access to new materials properties. The assembly of nanoparticles into extended arrays can be controlled through surface functionalization and the use of increasingly sophisticated linkers. We present a versatile way to control the bonding symmetry of gold nanoparticles by wrapping them in flower-shaped DNA origami structures. These ‘nanoflowers’ assemble into two-dimensonal gold nanoparticle lattices with symmetries that can be controlled through auxiliary DNA linker strands. Nanoflower lattices are true composites: interactions between the gold nanoparticles are mediated entirely by DNA, and the DNA origami will only fold into its designed form in the presence of the gold nanoparticles.

The formal language and design principles of autonomous DNA walker circuits

ACS Synthetic Biology American Chemical Society 5:8 (2016) 878-884

Authors:

Michael Boemo, Alexandra E Lucas, Andrew J Turberfield, Luca Cardelli

Abstract:

Simple computation can be performed using the interactions between single-stranded molecules of DNA. These interactions are typically toehold-mediated strand displacement reactions in a well-mixed solution. We demonstrate that a DNA circuit with tethered reactants is a distributed system and show how it can be described as a stochastic Petri net. The system can be verified by mapping the Petri net onto a continuous-time Markov chain, which can also be used to find an optimal design for the circuit. This theoretical machinery can be applied to create software that automatically designs a DNA circuit, linking an abstract propositional formula to a physical DNA computation system that is capable of evaluating it. We conclude by introducing example mechanisms that can implement such circuits experimentally and discuss their individual strengths and weaknesses.

An Autonomous Molecular Assembler for Programmable Chemical Synthesis.

Nature Chemistry Nature Publishing Group (2016)

Authors:

Meng, RA Muscat, ML McKee, PJ Milnes, El-Sagheer, JN Bath, Davis, Brown, RK O'Reilly, Turberfield

Abstract:

Molecular machines that assemble polymers in a programmed sequence are fundamental to life. They are also an achievable goal of nanotechnology. Here, we report synthetic molecular machinery made from DNA which controls and records the formation of covalent bonds. We show that an autonomous cascade of DNA hybridization reactions can create oligomers, from building blocks linked by olefin or peptide bonds, with a sequence defined by a reconfigurable molecular program. The system can also be programmed to achieve combinatorial assembly. The sequence of assembly reactions, and thus the structure, of each oligomer synthesized is recorded in a DNA molecule which enables this information to be recovered by PCR amplification followed by DNA sequencing.