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Formation of non-base-pairing DNA microgels using directed phase transition of amphiphilic monomers
Author

*Chanseok Lee, *Sungho Do, Jae Young Lee, Minju Kim, Sang Moon Kim, Yongdae Shin, and Do-Nyun Kim 

Journal
Nucleic Acids Research
Volume
50
Page
4187-4196
Year
2022
Date
2022-04-01

Abstract

Programmability of DNA sequences enables the formation of synthetic DNA nanostructures and their macromolecular assemblies such as DNA hydrogels. The base pair-level interaction of DNA is a foundational and powerful mechanism to build DNA structures at the nanoscale; however, its temperature sensitivity and weak interaction force remain a barrier for the facile and scalable assembly of DNA structures toward higher-order structures. We conducted this study to provide an alternative, non-base-pairing approach to connect nanoscale DNA units to yield micrometer-sized gels based on the sequential phase transition of amphiphilic unit structures. Strong electrostatic interactions between DNA nanostructures and polyelectrolyte spermines led to the formation of giant phase-separated aggregates of monomer units. Gelation could be initiated by the addition of NaCl, which weakened the electrostatic DNA-spermine interaction while attractive interactions between cholesterols created stable networks by crosslinking DNA monomers. In contrast to the conventional DNA gelation techniques, our system used solid aggregates as a precursor for DNA microgels. Therefore, in situ gelation could be achieved by depositing aggregates on the desired substrate and subsequently initiating a phase transition. Our approach can expand the utility and functionality of DNA hydrogels by using more complex nucleic acid assemblies as unit structures and combining the technique with top-down microfabrication methods.

Name*: Contributed equally

Name: Corresponding author