Single-Stranded DNA-Encoded Gold Nanoparticle Clusters as Programmable Enzyme Equivalents.
Xiaoliang ChenYue WangXinpei DaiLongjiang DingJielin ChenGuangbao YaoXiaoguo LiuShihua LuoJiye ShiLihua WangRachel NechushtaiEli PikarskyItamar WillnerChun-Hai FanJiang LiPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Nanozymes have emerged as a class of novel catalytic nanomaterials that show great potential to substitute natural enzymes in various applications. Nevertheless, spatial organization of multiple subunits in a nanozyme to rationally engineer its catalytic properties remains to be a grand challenge. Here, we report a DNA-based approach to encode the organization of gold nanoparticle clusters (GNCs) for the construction of programmable enzyme equivalents (PEEs). We find that single-stranded (ss-) DNA scaffolds can self-fold into nanostructures with prescribed poly-adenine (polyA) loops and double-stranded stems and that the polyA loops serve as specific sites for seed-free nucleation and growth of GNCs with well-defined particle numbers and interparticle spaces. A spectrum of GNCs, ranging from oligomers with discrete particle numbers (2-4) to polymer-like chains, are in situ synthesized in this manner. The polymeric GNCs with multiple spatially organized nanoparticles as subunits show programmable peroxidase-like catalytic activity that can be tuned by the scaffold size and the inter-polyA spacer length. This study thus opens new routes to the rational design of nanozymes for various biological and biomedical applications.