| Literature DB >> 34071795 |
Sofia Ojasalo1, Petteri Piskunen1, Boxuan Shen1,2, Mauri A Kostiainen1,3, Veikko Linko1,3.
Abstract
Viruses are among the most intriguing nanostructures found in nature. Their atomically precise shapes and unique biological properties, especially in protecting andEntities:
Keywords: DNA nanotechnology; DNA origami; biomedicine; capsid; nanofabrication; protein; self-assembly; vaccine; virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34071795 PMCID: PMC8228324 DOI: 10.3390/nano11061413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Comparison between conventional and DNA origami directed virus assembly. (a) Conventional virus assembly. Capsid proteins (CP, red) assemble into a complete native virus capsid through protein-protein interactions and simultaneously package the flexible genome (DNA or RNA) into it [39]. (b) DNA origami directed virus assemblies. Left: Virus capsid takes a non-native shape as the viral CPs assemble on top of the templating DNA origami that serves as “structured” genomic material similarly as in Ref. [40]. Middle: Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) capsid assembles at the specific location of the DNA origami template. The capsid forms around the protruding RNA strand that contains a characteristic loop as an origin-of-assembly sequence [41]. Right: Virus capsids are bound to DNA origami platforms which are further assembled into higher-order structures [42]. (a) reproduced with permission from [39]. Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, 2020. (b) Middle panel reproduced with permission from [41]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2018. Right panel reproduced with permission from [42]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2010.
Figure 2DNA origami encapsulation inside virus capsid proteins. (a) Schematic illustration of the formation of DNA-origami-CCMV CP complexes via electrostatic interactions and enhanced transfection to cells [40]. (b) TEM images of DNA origami-CP complexes with various γ values (from left to right: γ = 0, γ = 0.08, γ = 0.64). (c) Quantification of DNA origami–CP positive cells with HCS microscopy (γ increases gradually from samples 1 to 6). Colored open bars indicate measurements from individual samples; black-filled bars are calculated mean values of the triplicate samples. (d) Reconstructed SV40 particles: left, empty capsid; right, SV40 capsid (gray) encapsulated spherical DNA origami (yellow) of 35 diameter [44]. (e) Class averaged particles images show both the empty capsids and the encapsulated DNA origami in different orientations. (a–c) reproduced with permission from [40]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2014. (d,e) reproduced with permission from [44]. Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, 2019.
Figure 3DNA origami-virus hybrids based on Tobacco mosaic viruses (TMV). (a) The in situ assembly process of TMV CPs around a TMV RNA strand anchored to a DNA origami platform [41]. The origin of assembly (OAS) sequence nucleates the growth of the nanotube. (b) Assembled TMV-DNA origami hybrids viewed with TEM. The graph on the right shows the length distribution of assembled tubes around a ~1910-nt long RNA. Scale bars are 50 nm. (c) The in situ assembly of a TMV rod nestled inside a DNA origami barrel [45]. The assembly is guided by pathing the RNA strand through multiple binding sites along the DNA origami and then releasing the bound RNA in a stepwise manner. The DNA origami barrel was a 23-helix bundle with a length of ~30 nm and an inner diameter of ~34 nm. (d) TEM images of the steps depicted in Figure 3c. Left: the DNA origami barrel with pathed RNA. Middle: CP rod assembly on the unbound overhang of the RNA. Right: A finished CP rod inside the hollow of a DNA origami barrel. Scale bar is 50 nm. (a,b) reproduced with permission from [41]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2018. (c,d) reproduced with permission from [45]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2020.
Figure 4DNA origami directed assemblies mimicking virus structures. (a) Virus-inspired lipid membrane coating of DNA origami octahedron [46]. TEM insets are 100 nm × 100 nm. (b) Multilamellar lipid assemblies on 60HB DNA origami [47]. The TEM inset is 125 nm × 250 nm. (c) Modular protein polymer with a nonspecific DNA binding domain coating a DNA origami tile [51]. Green: C8 polypeptide bristle. Red: BSso7d binding domain. Gray: dsDNA. The AFM inset is 200 nm × 200 nm. (d) Inert bovine serum albumin coating of 60HB DNA origami [52]. The TEM insets are 80 nm × 80 nm. (e) Icosahedral wireframe DNA origami with programmable antigen patterns. The insets are 80 nm × 80 nm [58]. (a) reproduced with permission from [46] (https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/nn5011914 accessed on 26 May 2021). Further permissions related to the material excerpted should be directed to the American Chemical Society. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2014. (b) reproduced with permission from [47]. Copyright John Wiley and Sons, 2021. (c) reproduced with permission from [51]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2017. (d) Reproduced with permission from [52]. Published by John Wiley and Sons, 2017. (e) reproduced with permission from [58]. Copyright Springer Nature, 2020.
Selected virus and virus-mimicking protein-DNA nanostructure hybrids, their assembly methods, characterization techniques and possible target applications/functions.
| Hybrid Composition | Assembly Method | Characterization Technique (s) | Target Application/Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| MS2 capsids + rectangular and triangular DNA origami [ | ssDNA-modified capsids + a complementary ssDNA overhang protruding from DNA origami | AFM, TEM | higher-order assemblies of viruses through conjugation of programmable DNA origami platforms |
| CCMV CPs + rectangular DNA origami [ | positively charged N-terminus of CP + negatively charged DNA origami | EMSA, TEM, confocal microscopy | virus-encapsulation significantly enhances the cellular delivery rate of DNA origami |
| SV40 CPs + variety of spherical DNA origami [ | cooperative assembly of VP1s around DNA origami | AGE, TEM, cryo-TEM | investigating the effect of DNA origami of different sizes as a substrate for SV40 assembly |
| TMV CPs + various DNA origami [ | in situ assembly of CPs around pre-bound RNA + toehold-operated hybridization sites on DNA origami | TEM, AFM, fluorescence assay | confined and programmable assembly, complex architectures |
| PEGylated lipid bilayers + DNA origami octahedron [ | lipid-DNA conjugates anchored to DNA origami + liposome addition (and surfactant removal) for a fused lipid bilayer | TEM, IL-6 & IL-12 immunoassays, DNase I digestion assay, splenocyte activation assay, flow cytometry, confocal microscopy, fluorescence assay | mimicking lipid envelope of virus, enhancing stability and immunocompatibility |
| cationic multilamellar lipid bilayer + 6HB, 60HB and plate DNA origami [ | electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions | AGE, TEM, cryo-TEM, ET, EDS | improves nuclease resistance, a route to form DNA-templated lipid assemblies |
| nonspecific and nonelectrostatic DNA binding domain in polymer bristle | AGE, AFM, fluorescence microscopy, DNase I digestion assay | dense bristle coating with modular bristles enables tuning of the stability, mechanical properties and surface chemistry of DNA structures while still retaining accessibility for strong binders | |
| dendron-modified BSA and HFBI + 60HB DNA origami [ | positively charged dendron as a synthetic DNA binding domain + negatively charged DNA origami surface | AGE, TEM, DNase I digestion assay, IL-6 immunoassay, confocal microscopy, FACS | BSA protein corona improves the nuclease resistance, immunocompatibility and cellular delivery of DNA origami |
| peptoids + octahedral wireframe DNA [ | positively charged moieties in peptoid + negatively charged DNA frame | AGE, TEM, DLS, SAXS, fluorescence assay, molecular dynamics simulation, DNase I digestion assay, protease digestion assay, magnesium depletion assay | alignment of coating molecules, tunable stability, cell-targeting, display of functional molecules |
| antigens + icosahedral wireframe and rod-like DNA origami [ | eOD-GT8 antigens coupled to synthetic PNA strands + complementary ssDNA overhangs protruding from DNA origami | AGE, TEM, intracellular calcium indicator dye assay | activation of B-cell membrane-bound receptor IgM, vaccine development |