| Literature DB >> 33048544 |
Sanja Novak1, Jing Zhang1, Emmanuel Kentzinger2, Ulrich Rücker2, Giuseppe Portale3, Niklas Jung4, Ulrich Jonas4, Jin S Myung5, Roland G Winkler5, Gerhard Gompper5, Jan K G Dhont1,6, Emmanuel Stiakakis1.
Abstract
Adding shape and interaction anisotropy to a colloidal particle offers exquisitely tunable routes to engineer a rich assortment of complex-architected structures. Inspired by the hierarchical self-assembly concept with block copolymers and DNA liquid crystals and exploiting the unique assembly properties of DNA, we report here the construction and self-assembly of DNA-based soft-patchy anisotropic particles with a high degree of modularity in the system's design. By programmable positioning of thermoresponsive polymeric patches on the backbone of a stiff DNA duplex with linear and star-shaped architecture, we reversibly drive the DNA from a disordered ensemble to a diverse array of long-range ordered multidimensional nanostructures with tunable lattice spacing, ranging from lamellar to bicontinuous double-gyroid and double-diamond cubic morphologies, through the alteration of temperature. Our results demonstrate that the proposed hierarchical self-assembly strategy can be applied to any kind of DNA nanoarchitecture, highlighting the design principles for integration of self-assembly concepts from the physics of liquid crystals, block copolymers, and patchy colloids into the continuously growing interdisciplinary research field of structural DNA nanotechnology.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; anisotropic patchy particles; block copolymers; liquid crystals; self-assembly
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33048544 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c05536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881