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Method Article
This article presents a detailed protocol for T4 ligation and denaturing PAGE purification of small circular DNA molecules, annealing and native PAGE analysis of circular tiles, assembling and AFM imaging of 1D and 2D DNA nanostructures, as well as agarose gel electrophoresis and centrifugation purification of finite DNA nanostructures.
This article presents a detailed protocol for synthesis of small circular DNA molecules, annealing of circular DNA motifs, and construction of 1D and 2D DNA nanostructures. Over decades, the rapid development of DNA nanotechnology is attributed to the use of linear DNAs as the source materials. For example, the DAO (double crossover, antiparallel, odd half-turns) tile is well-known as a building block for construction of 2D DNA lattices; the core structure of DAO is made from two linear single-stranded (ss) oligonucleotides, like two ropes making a right hand granny knot. Herein, a new type of DNA tiles called cDAO (coupled DAO) are built using a small circular ss-DNA of c64nt or c84nt (circular 64 or 84 nucleotides) as the scaffold strand and several linear ss-DNAs as the staple strands. Perfect 1D and 2D nanostructures are assembled from cDAO tiles: infinite nanowires, nanospirals, nanotubes, nanoribbons; and finite nano-rectangles. Detailed protocols are described: 1) preparation by T4 ligase and purification by denaturing PAGE (polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) of small circular oligonucleotides, 2) annealing of stable circular tiles, followed by native PAGE analysis, 3) assembling of infinite 1D nanowires, nanorings, nanospirals, infinite 2D lattices of nanotubes and nanoribbons, and finite 2D nano-rectangles, followed by AFM (Atomic Force Microscopy) imaging. The method is simple, robust, and affordable for most labs.
DNA molecules have been used to build many kinds of nanostructures over decades. Typical motifs include DAE (double crossover, antiparallel, even half-turns) and DAO tiles1,2,3, star tiles4,5,6,7, single stranded (ss) tiles8,9,10, and DNA origami11,12,13. These DNA motifs and lattices are assembled from linear ss-DNAs. Recently, others and we have reported the use of circular ss-oligonucleotides as scaffolds to build motifs, 1D nanotubes, and 2D lattices14,15,16,17. By inserting a Holliday junction (HJ)18,19,20,21 at the center of c64nt, a pair of two coupled DAO tiles can be formed17. This new cDAO motif and its derivatives are stable and rigid enough to assemble 2D DNA lattices up to 3 × 5 µm2. In this paper, we use a term of "circular tile", which is defined as a stable DNA complex molecule constructed with one circular scaffold and other linear staples of ss-oligonucleotides, and another term of "linear tile", which is built from a full set of linear ss-oligonucleotides.
This protocol demonstrates how to construct five kinds of DNA nanostructures with small circular DNA molecules as scaffolds: 1) infinite 1D c64nt and c84nt nanowires, 2) infinite 2D cDAO-c64nt-O and cDAO-c64nt-E (-O represents an odd number of 5 half-turns and -E represents an even number of 4 half-turns) lattices, 3) infinite 2D cDAO-c84nt-O and cDAO-c84nt-E lattices, 4) finite 2D 5 × 6 cDAO-c64nt-O and 5 × 6 cDAO-c74&84nt-O rectangles, 5) infinite 1D acDAO-c64nt-E nanorings and nanospirals (please refer to Figure 3-5 for the schematic drawings and images of the above five kinds of DNA nanostructures). The 1D c64nt and c84nt nanowires are assembled from each c64nt and c84nt scaffold associated with two linear staples respectively. Each circular tile of cDAO-c64nt, acDAO-c64nt, cDAO-c74nt, or cDAO-c84nt is annealed from its corresponding scaffold of c64nt, c74nt, or c84nt with four linear staples respectively. The infinite 2D lattices are assembled from the same type of two circular tiles with different sequences. The two finite 2D rectangle lattices are assembled from two sets of 32 circular sub-tiles respectively. To save money, only one-sequenced c64nt, c74nt, and c84nt is used as the respective scaffold while different overhangs are used to anneal the 32 cDAO-c64nt, 12 cDAO-c74nt, and 20 cDAO-c84nt circular sub-tiles respectively in the first sub-tile annealing step, then mix the corresponding 32 circular sub-tiles together and apply the second lattice annealing step to assemble the finite 5 × 6 cDAO-c64nt-O and 5 × 6 cDAO-c74&84nt-O lattices, respectively. Definitely, differently-sequenced circular scaffolds can be adopted to assemble a variety of finite size nanostructures, however it will cost more money and labors. The infinite 1D acDAO-c64nt-E nanorings and nanospirals are annealed from one-sequenced asymmetric acDAO-c64nt tiles with linear connections of an even number of 4 half-turns. There are two approaches to assemble infinite 2D lattices from circular tiles of cDAO-c64nt and cDAO-c84nt, which are distinguished by the intertile distances of an even number of 4 and an odd number of 5 half-turns respectively. The former requires all tiles to be aligned identically; the latter requires alternation of the faces of two neighboring tiles along the helical axes. If the tile is rigid and planar, such as cDAO-c64nt, both approaches will generate planar nanoribbons; if the tile is curved towards one direction, such as cDAO-c84nt, the intertile connection of an even number of 4 half turns will generate nanotubes, whereas the intertile connection of an odd number of 5 half turns will produce planar nanoribbons due to elimination of curvature-biased growth by alternate alignment of curved tiles. The successful assembly of 1D and 2D DNA nanostructures from circular tiles indicates several advantages of this new approach: enforced stability and rigidity of circular tiles over linear tiles, chiral tiles for assembly of asymmetrical nanostructures such as nanorings and nanoribbons, new visions on understanding the DNA mechanics and molecular structures, etc.
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1. Preparation of Circular DNAs
2. Annealing of Assembly Solutions
3. Native PAGE Analysis
4. Purification of Finite Lattices
5. AFM Imaging
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The circular DNA moves slightly slower than its precursor linear DNA in denaturing PAGE (Figure 2) because the pore inside the circular DNA is penetrated and retarded by gel fibers23,24,25. The correct ligation reaction efficiency for oligo-monomer cyclization depends on the substrate sequence and concentration, reaction temperature, time, etc. As the concen...
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The protocols presented in this article focus on the synthesis of small circular DNA molecules and the assembly of DNA nanostructures. Most of randomly-sequenced DNA designs can be used in this protocol. The purity of circular DNAs is critical for the success of DNA assemblies. The production yield of cyclization can be improved by lowering the concentration of 5'-phosphorylated linear DNA; however, this will increase the workload to produce the same amounts of circular DNAs. The length of splint DNA strands also affects...
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The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.
We are grateful for financial support from the NSFC (grants no. 91753134 and 21571100), and the State Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics of Southeast University.
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Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
T4 ligase | TaKaRa | 2011A | |
T4 buffer | TaKaRa | 2011A | |
TE buffer | Sangon | B548106 | |
Thermo bottle | Thermos | SK-3000 | |
Thermo cycler | Bio Gener | GE4852T | |
Exonuclease I | TaKaRa | 2650A | |
Exonuclease I buffer | TaKaRa | 2650A | |
30% (w/v) Acryl/Bis solution (19:1) | Sangon | B546016 | |
TAE premix podwer | Sangon | B540023 | |
Mg(Ac)2·4H2O | Nanjing Chemical Reagent | C0190550223 | |
Urea | Sangon | A510907 | |
TEMED | BBI | A100761 | |
Ammonium Persulfate | Nanjing Chemical Reagent | 13041920295 | |
Power supply | Beijing Liuyi | DYY-8C | |
Water bath | Sumsung | DK-S12 | |
Formamide | BBI | A100314 | |
DNA Marker (25~500 bp) | Sangon | B600303 | |
DNA Marker (100~3000 bp) | Sangon | B500347 | |
Loading buffer | Sangon | B548313 | |
PAGE electrophoresis systerm | Beijing Liuyi | 24DN | |
Filter | ASD | 5010-2225 | 0.22 µM |
UV imaging System | Tanon | 2500R | |
n-butanol | Sangon | A501800 | |
Absolute Ethanol | SCR | 10009257 | |
NaOAc | Nanjing Chemical Reagent | 12032610459 | |
Centrifuge | eppendorf | Centrifuge 5424R | |
Vacuum concentrator | CHRIST | RVC 2-18 | |
Ultraviolet spectrum | Allsheng | Nano-100 | |
nucleic acid stain | Biotium | 16G1010 | GelRed |
Agarose | Biowest | G-10 | |
Agarose electrophoresis systerm | Beijing Liuyi | DYCP-31CN | |
Heating Plate | Jiangsu Jintan | DB-1 | |
TBE premix podwer | Sangon | B540024 | |
filter column | Bio-Rad | 7326165 | Freeze 'N Squeeze column |
AFM | Bruker | Dimension FastScan | |
PEG8000 | BBI | A100159 | |
Mica | Ted Pella | BP50 | |
triangular AFM probe in air | Bruker | FastScan-C | |
triangular AFM probe in fulid | Bruker | ScanAsyst-fluid+ | |
DNA strands | Sangon |
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