| Literature DB >> 29950921 |
Sofia Julin1, Sami Nummelin1, Mauri A Kostiainen1,2, Veikko Linko1.
Abstract
Structural DNA nanotechnology provides unique, well-controlled, versatile, and highly addressable motifs and templates for assembling materials at the nanoscale. These methods to build from the bottom-up using DNA as a construction material are based on programmable and fully predictable Watson-Crick base pairing. Researchers have adopted these techniques to an increasing extent for creating numerous DNA nanostructures for a variety of uses ranging from nanoelectronics to drug-delivery applications. Recently, an increasing effort has been put into attaching nanoparticles (the size range of 1-20 nm) to the accurate DNA motifs and into creating metallic nanostructures (typically 20-100 nm) using designer DNA nanoshapes as molds or stencils. By combining nanoparticles with the superior addressability of DNA-based scaffolds, it is possible to form well-ordered materials with intriguing and completely new optical, plasmonic, electronic, and magnetic properties. This focused review discusses the DNA structure-directed nanoparticle assemblies covering the wide range of different one-, two-, and three-dimensional systems.Entities:
Keywords: DNA nanotechnology; DNA origami; Metal nanoparticles; Nucleic acids; Plasmonics; Self-assembly
Year: 2018 PMID: 29950921 PMCID: PMC5997120 DOI: 10.1007/s11051-018-4225-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanopart Res ISSN: 1388-0764 Impact factor: 2.253
Fig. 1One-dimensional arrays of nanoparticles and extension to more complex configurations. a Double crossover (DX) tile-based assembly of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). A 2D sheet can be further assembled into a tubular shape [reprinted with permission from Sharma et al. 2009. Copyright (2009). American Association for the Advancement of Science]. b Size-selective encapsulation of AuNPs using triangulated DNA tubes [reprinted with permission from Lo et al. 2010a. Copyright (2010). Nature Publishing Group]. c AuNP chains arranged using repeating triangular rung units [reprinted with permission from Lau et al. 2014. Copyright (2014). John Wiley and Sons]. d Linear and rigid AuNP (10 nm) chains formed using T- and DX-motifs [reprinted with permission from Ohya et al. 2012. Copyright (2012). John Wiley and Sons]. e AuNPs (10 nm) organized in left- and right-handed helical conformation for chiral plasmonics with the help of rod-like DNA origami [reprinted with permission from Kuzyk et al. 2012. Copyright (2012). Nature Publishing Group]. f Gold nanorods (AuNRs) assembled into left- and right-handed helical superstructures using 2D rectangular DNA origami templates [reprinted with permission from Lan et al. 2015. Copyright (2015). American Chemical Society]
Fig. 2Two-dimensional nanoparticle arrays. a A 2D DX DNA-tile template was used to arrange 5- and 10-nm AuNPs into parallel, alternating rows [reprinted with permission from Pinto et al. 2005. Copyright (2005). American Chemical Society]. b Assembly of a 2D square array using AuNP-bearing DNA tiles [reprinted with permission from Sharma et al. 2006. Copyright (2006). John Wiley and Sons]. c AuNPs were incorporated into “tensegrity triangles” used in the assembly of 2D arrays [reprinted with permission from Zheng et al. 2006. Copyright (2006). American Chemical Society]. d AuNPs wrapped with DNA origami bundles formed different lattices depending on the position of the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) linkers [reprinted with permission from Schreiber et al. 2016. Copyright (2016). American Chemical Society]. e 2D square lattices assembled using cross-shaped DNA origami tiles with AuNP attachment sites in the middle [reprinted with permission from Liu et al. 2016a. Copyright (2016). Nature Publishing Group]. f Octahedral DNA origami structures connected AuNPs into 2D square arrays [reprinted with permission from Tian et al. 2015. Copyright (2015). Nature Publishing Group]
Fig. 3Three-dimensional AuNP lattices assembled using DNA origami frames. a Face-centered cubic (FCC) and diamond lattices obtained from a tetrahedron-shaped DNA origami frame (Liu et al. 2016b) [adapted and reprinted with permission from Hong et al. 2017. Copyright (2017). American Chemical Society]. b Various superlattices constructed using different polyhedron DNA origami frames [reprinted with permission from Tian et al. 2016. Copyright (2016). Nature Publishing Group]. c Rhombohedral lattice obtained from DNA origami-based “tensegrity triangles” [reprinted with permission from Zhang et al. 2017]