Purification of DNA Nanoparticles Using Photocleavable Biotin Tethers.
Heather R EversonKayla NeyraDylan Valerio ScartonSoumya ChandrasekharChristopher M GreenThorsten-Lars SchmidtIgor L MedintzRémi VenezianoDivita MathurPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
The number of applications of self-assembled deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) origami nanoparticles (DNA NPs) has increased drastically, following the development of a variety of single-stranded template DNA (ssDNA) that can serve as the scaffold strand. In addition to viral genomes, such as M13 bacteriophage and lambda DNAs, enzymatically produced ssDNA from various template sources is rapidly gaining traction and being applied as the scaffold for DNA NP preparation. However, separating fully formed DNA NPs that have custom scaffolds from crude assembly mixes is often a multistep process of first separating the ssDNA scaffold from its enzymatic amplification process and then isolating the assembled DNA NPs from excess precursor strands. Only then is the DNA NP sample ready for downstream characterization and application. In this work, we highlight a single-step purification of custom sequence- or M13-derived scaffold-based DNA NPs using photocleavable biotin tethers. The process only requires an inexpensive ultraviolet (UV) lamp, and DNA NPs with up to 90% yield and high purity are obtained. We show the versatility of the process in separating two multihelix bundle structures and a wireframe polyhedral architecture.