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In Silico and In Cell Analysis of Openable DNA Nanocages for miRNA Silencing.

Sofia RanioloFederico IacovelliValeria UnidaAlessandro DesideriSilvia Biocca
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2019)
A computational and experimental integrated approach was applied in order to study the effect of engineering four DNA hairpins into an octahedral truncated DNA nanocage, to obtain a nanostructure able to recognize and bind specific oligonucleotide sequences. Modeling and classical molecular dynamics simulations show that the new H4-DNA nanocage maintains a stable conformation with the closed hairpins and, when bound to complementary oligonucleotides produces an opened conformation that is even more stable due to the larger hydrogen bond number between the hairpins and the oligonucleotides. The internal volume of the open conformation is much larger than the closed one, switching from 370 to 650 nm3, and the predicted larger conformational change is experimentally detectable by gel electrophoresis. H4-DNA nanocages display high stability in serum, can efficiently enter the cells where they are stable and maintain the ability to bind, and sequester an intracellular-specific oligonucleotide. Moreover, H4-DNA nanocages, modified in order to recognize the oncogenic miR21, are able to seize miRNA molecules inside cells in a selective manner.
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