Meta-DNA Strand Displacement for Sub-Micron-Scale Autonomous Reconfiguration.
Meiyuan QiWenhe MaQin XuFei WangPing SongSisi JiaXiaolei ZuoMingqiang LiGuangbao YaoChun-Hai FanPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Dynamic molecular interactions in chemical reaction networks lead to complex behaviors in living systems. Whereas recent advances in programming DNA molecular reactions have reached a high level of complexity at molecular and nanometer scales, achieving programmable autonomous behavior at submicron or even larger scales remains challenging. Here, we present a mechanism of meta-DNA strand displacement reactions (M-SDRs) that is mediated solely by meta-toehold (M-toehold) using versatile submicron building blocks of meta-DNA (M-DNA). M-SDR emulates the toehold binding and branch migration processes of conventional strand displacement. Importantly, the kinetics of M-SDR can be modulated over a range of five orders of magnitude reaching a maximum rate of about 1.62 × 10 5 M -1 s -1 . Further, we demonstrate the use of M-SDR to program autonomous reconfiguration in information transmission and logical computation systems. We envision that M-SDR serves as a versatile mechanism for emulating autonomous behavior approaching the cellular level.