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Regulating DNA-Hybridization Using a Chemically Fueled Reaction Cycle

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Molecular machines, such as ATPases or motor proteins, couple the catalysis of a chemical reaction, most commonly hydrolysis of nucleotide triphosphates, to their conformational change. In essence, they continuously convert… Click to show full abstract

Molecular machines, such as ATPases or motor proteins, couple the catalysis of a chemical reaction, most commonly hydrolysis of nucleotide triphosphates, to their conformational change. In essence, they continuously convert a chemical fuel to drive their motion. An outstanding goal of nanotechnology remains to synthesize a nanomachine with similar functions, precision, and speed. The field of DNA nanotechnology has given rise to the engineering precision required for such a device. Simultaneously, the field of systems chemistry developed fast chemical reaction cycles that convert fuel to change the function of molecules. In this work, we thus combined a chemical reaction cycle with the precision of DNA nanotechnology to yield kinetic control over the conformational state of a DNA hairpin. Future work on such systems will result in out-of-equilibrium DNA nanodevices with precise functions.

Keywords: dna; nanotechnology; reaction; chemical reaction; reaction cycle

Journal Title: Journal of the American Chemical Society
Year Published: 2022

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