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Tunable DNA Origami Motors Translocate Ballistically Over ?m Distances at nm/s Speeds.


ABSTRACT: Inspired by biological motor proteins, that efficiently convert chemical fuel to unidirectional motion, there has been considerable interest in developing synthetic analogues. Among the synthetic motors created thus far, DNA motors that undertake discrete steps on RNA tracks have shown the greatest promise. Nonetheless, DNA nanomotors lack intrinsic directionality, are low speed and take a limited number of steps prior to stalling or dissociation. Herein, we report the first example of a highly tunable DNA origami motor that moves linearly over micron distances at an average speed of 40?nm/min. Importantly, nanomotors move unidirectionally without intervention through an external force field or a patterned track. Because DNA origami enables precise testing of nanoscale structure-function relationships, we were able to experimentally study the role of motor shape, chassis flexibility, leg distribution, and total number of legs in tuning performance. An anisotropic rigid chassis coupled with a high density of legs maximizes nanomotor speed and endurance.

SUBMITTER: Bazrafshan A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7301628 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Tunable DNA Origami Motors Translocate Ballistically Over μm Distances at nm/s Speeds.

Bazrafshan Alisina A   Meyer Travis A TA   Su Hanquan H   Brockman Joshua M JM   Blanchard Aaron T AT   Piranej Selma S   Duan Yuxin Y   Ke Yonggang Y   Salaita Khalid K  

Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) 20200401 24


Inspired by biological motor proteins, that efficiently convert chemical fuel to unidirectional motion, there has been considerable interest in developing synthetic analogues. Among the synthetic motors created thus far, DNA motors that undertake discrete steps on RNA tracks have shown the greatest promise. Nonetheless, DNA nanomotors lack intrinsic directionality, are low speed and take a limited number of steps prior to stalling or dissociation. Herein, we report the first example of a highly  ...[more]

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