| Literature DB >> 36133183 |
Ziwen Dai1, Hoi Man Leung1, Qi Gao2, Fei Wang1, Sze Wing Wong1, Ling Sum Liu1, Yu Ju Au1, King Wai Chiu Lai2, Pik Kwan Lo1,3.
Abstract
A DNA tetrahedron as the most classical and simplest three-dimensional DNA nanostructure has been widely utilized in biomedicine and biosensing. However, the existing assembly approaches usually require harsh thermal annealing conditions, involve the formation of unwanted by-products, and have poor size control. Herein, a facile strategy to fabricate a discrete DNA tetrahedron as a single, thermodynamically stable product in a quantitative yield at room temperature is reported. This system does not require a DNA trigger or thermal annealing treatment to initiate self-assembly. This DNA tetrahedron was made of three chemically ligated triangular-shaped DNAs in unconventional ladder-like arrangements, with measured heights of ∼4.16 ± 0.04 nm, showing extra protections for enzymatic degradation in biological environment. They show substantial cellular uptake in different cell lines via temperature, energy-dependent and clathrin-mediated endocytosis pathways. These characteristics allow our DNA tetrahedron to be used as vehicles for the delivery of very small and temperature-sensitive cargos. This novel assembly strategy developed for DNA tetrahedra could potentially be extended to other highly complex polyhedra; this indicated its generalizability. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 36133183 PMCID: PMC9473169 DOI: 10.1039/c8na00323h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Adv ISSN: 2516-0230
Scheme 1The assembling strategy for the construction of a discrete DNA tetrahedron.
Fig. 1(a) Denaturing PAGE analysis of the pure ligated cyclic triangles compared with their open-ended DNA strands. (b) Native PAGE analysis of the hybridization of cyclic triangles with their complementary strands. (c) Native PAGE analysis of the stepwise formation of DNA tetrahedron. (d) Native PAGE analysis of the formation of DNA tetrahedron with different orders of strand addition. Lane 1: P1; Lane 2: P1 + P2; Lane 3: P1 + P3; Lane 4: P2 + P3; Lane 5: P1 + P2 + P3; Lane 6: P2 + P3 + P1; Lane 7: P3 + P1 + P2; Lane 8: One-pot mixing.
Fig. 2(a) Schematic of the formation of AuNP-DNA conjugates via thiol chemistry and agarose gel analysis of isolated, purified AuNP-DNA conjugates. (b) Representative TEM images of AuNP-tethered DNA tetrahedron. (c) Measured interparticle distance of gold nanoparticles tethered on DNA tetrahedron, data analyzed by ImageJ. (d) Statistical distribution analysis of the patterns of gold nanoparticles found in TEM studies, N = 172.
Fig. 3(a) Representative AFM images of py-THD immobilized onto HOPG substrates. Zoom-in AFM images of individual particle with triangular-shaped. (b) Statistical height analysis of AFM images for py-THD (N = 152).
Fig. 4(a) Thermal denaturation studies of py-THDs and its duplexes. (b) Confocal fluorescence images of Cy3-labeled py-THDs incubated with HeLa, MCF-7 and KB cells for 12 h. (c) FRET studies of doubly Cy-labeled py-THDs in different cell lines. Samples were excited with 514 nm laser and their emission were collected from 550 to 600 nm (green channel for Cy3) and 650 to 700 nm (red channel for Cy5) (d) flow cytometry studies showing the effects of inhibitors on cellular uptake of py-THDs. Scale bar is 10 μm.