| Literature DB >> 28920942 |
Xiaojin He1,2,3,4, Ruojie Sha1, Rebecca Zhuo1,2, Yongli Mi3,4, Paul M Chaikin2, Nadrian C Seeman1.
Abstract
Self-replication and evolution under selective pressure are inherent phenomena in life, and but few artificial systems exhibit these phenomena. We have designed a system of DNA origami rafts that exponentially replicates a seed pattern, doubling the copies in each diurnal-like cycle of temperature and ultraviolet illumination, producing more than 7 million copies in 24 cycles. We demonstrate environmental selection in growing populations by incorporating pH-sensitive binding in two subpopulations. In one species, pH-sensitive triplex DNA bonds enable parent-daughter templating, while in the second species, triplex binding inhibits the formation of duplex DNA templating. At pH 5.3, the replication rate of species I is ∼1.3-1.4 times faster than that of species II. At pH 7.8, the replication rates are reversed. When mixed together in the same vial, the progeny of species I replicate preferentially at pH 7.8; similarly at pH 5.3, the progeny of species II take over the system. This addressable selectivity should be adaptable to the selection and evolution of multi-component self-replicating materials in the nanoscopic-to-microscopic size range.Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28920942 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841