Reversible Supra-Folding of User-Programmed Functional DNA Nanostructures on Fuzzy Cationic Substrates.
Koyomi NakazawaFarah El FakihVincent JalletCaroline Rossi-GendronMarina MaricontiLéa ChocronMafumi HishidaKazuya SaitoMathieu MorelSergii RudiukDamien BaiglPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
We report that user-defined DNA nanostructures, such as two-dimensional (2D) origamis and nanogrids, undergo a rapid higher-order folding transition, referred to as supra-folding, into three-dimensional (3D) compact structures (origamis) or well-defined μm-long ribbons (nanogrids), when they adsorb on a soft cationic substrate prepared by layer-by-layer deposition of polyelectrolytes. Once supra-folded, origamis can be switched back on the surface into their 2D original shape through addition of heparin, a highly charged anionic polyelectrolyte known as an efficient competitor of DNA-polyelectrolyte complexation. Orthogonal to DNA base-pairing principles, this reversible structural reconfiguration is also versatile; we show in particular that 1) it is compatible with various origami shapes, 2) it perfectly preserves fine structural details as well as site-specific functionality, and 3) it can be applied to dynamically address the spatial distribution of origami-tethered proteins.