Literature DB >> 25268955

From bistate molecular switches to self-directed track-walking nanomotors.

Iong Ying Loh1, Juan Cheng, Shern Ren Tee, Artem Efremov, Zhisong Wang.   

Abstract

Track-walking nanomotors and larger systems integrating these motors are important for wide real-world applications of nanotechnology. However, inventing these nanomotors remains difficult, a sharp contrast to the widespread success of simpler switch-like nanodevices, even though the latter already encompasses basic elements of the former such as engine-like bistate contraction/extension or leg-like controllable binding. This conspicuous gap reflects an impeding bottleneck for the nanomotor development, namely, lack of a modularized construction by which spatially and functionally separable "engines" and "legs" are flexibly assembled into a self-directed motor. Indeed, all track-walking nanomotors reported to date combine the engine and leg functions in the same molecular part, which largely underpins the device-motor gap. Here we propose a general design principle allowing the modularized nanomotor construction from disentangled engine-like and leg-like motifs, and provide an experimental proof of concept by implementing a bipedal DNA nanomotor up to a best working regime of this versatile design principle. The motor uses a light-powered contraction-extension switch to drive a coordinated hand-over-hand directional walking on a DNA track. Systematic fluorescence experiments confirm the motor's directional motion and suggest that the motor possesses two directional biases, one for rear leg dissociation and one for forward leg binding. This study opens a viable route to develop track-walking nanomotors from numerous molecular switches and binding motifs available from nanodevice research and biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DNA; modular design; molecular machine; nanomotor; optomechanics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25268955     DOI: 10.1021/nn5034983

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Nano        ISSN: 1936-0851            Impact factor:   15.881


  8 in total

Review 1.  Artificial Molecular Machines.

Authors:  Sundus Erbas-Cakmak; David A Leigh; Charlie T McTernan; Alina L Nussbaumer
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2015-09-08       Impact factor: 60.622

2.  Construction of Asymmetrical Hexameric Biomimetic Motors with Continuous Single-Directional Motion by Sequential Coordination.

Authors:  Zhengyi Zhao; Hui Zhang; Dan Shu; Carlo Montemagno; Baoquan Ding; Jingyuan Li; Peixuan Guo
Journal:  Small       Date:  2016-10-06       Impact factor: 13.281

3.  Visible/near-infrared subdiffraction imaging reveals the stochastic nature of DNA walkers.

Authors:  Jing Pan; Tae-Gon Cha; Feiran Li; Haorong Chen; Nina A Bragg; Jong Hyun Choi
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-01-20       Impact factor: 14.136

4.  How Well Can DNA Rupture DNA? Shearing and Unzipping Forces inside DNA Nanostructures.

Authors:  Shern Ren Tee; Zhisong Wang
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2018-01-10

Review 5.  Light-Powered Micro/Nanomotors.

Authors:  Hongxu Chen; Qilong Zhao; Xuemin Du
Journal:  Micromachines (Basel)       Date:  2018-01-23       Impact factor: 2.891

6.  In silico construction of a flexibility-based DNA Brownian ratchet for directional nanoparticle delivery.

Authors:  Suehyun Park; Jeongeun Song; Jun Soo Kim
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2019-04-05       Impact factor: 14.136

7.  A method for measuring rotation of a thermal carbon nanomotor using centrifugal effect.

Authors:  Kun Cai; Jingzhou Yu; Jiao Shi; Qing H Qin
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-06-02       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  A bio-hybrid DNA rotor-stator nanoengine that moves along predefined tracks.

Authors:  Julián Valero; Nibedita Pal; Soma Dhakal; Nils G Walter; Michael Famulok
Journal:  Nat Nanotechnol       Date:  2018-04-09       Impact factor: 39.213

  8 in total

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