| Literature DB >> 33410664 |
Jae Young Lee1, Jae Gyung Lee1, Giseok Yun1, Chanseok Lee2, Young-Joo Kim2, Kyung Soo Kim1, Tae Hwi Kim1, Do-Nyun Kim1,2,3.
Abstract
Structural DNA nanotechnology plays an ever-increasing role in advanced biomolecular applications. Here, we present a computational method to analyze structured DNA assemblies rapidly at near-atomic resolution. Both high computational efficiency and molecular-level accuracy are achieved by developing a multiscale analysis framework. The sequence-dependent relative geometry and mechanical properties of DNA motifs are characterized by the all-atom molecular dynamics simulation and incorporated into the structural finite element model successfully without significant loss of atomic information. The proposed method can predict the three-dimensional shape, equilibrium dynamic properties, and mechanical rigidities of monomeric to hierarchically assembled DNA structures at near-atomic resolution without adjusting any model parameters. The calculation takes less than only 15 min for most origami-scale DNA nanostructures consisting of 7000-8000 base-pairs. Hence, it is expected to be highly utilized in an iterative design-analysis-revision process for structured DNA assemblies.Entities:
Keywords: DNA nanostructures; DNA nanotechnology; mechanical properties; multiscale modeling; structural analysis
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33410664 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c07717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881