Acoustically shaped DNA-programmable materials

Recent advances in DNA nanotechnology allow for the assembly of nanocomponents with nanoscale precision, leading to the emergence of DNA-based material fabrication approaches. Yet, transferring these nano- and micron-scale structural arrangements to the macroscale morphologies remains a challenge, w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-08, Vol.15 (1), p.6875-8, Article 6875
Hauptverfasser: Arnon, Z. A., Piperno, S., Redeker, D. C., Randall, E., Tkachenko, A. V., Shpaisman, H., Gang, O.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent advances in DNA nanotechnology allow for the assembly of nanocomponents with nanoscale precision, leading to the emergence of DNA-based material fabrication approaches. Yet, transferring these nano- and micron-scale structural arrangements to the macroscale morphologies remains a challenge, which limits the development of materials and devices based on DNA nanotechnology. Here, we demonstrate a materials fabrication approach that combines DNA-programmable assembly with actively driven processes controlled by acoustic fields. This combination provides a prescribed nanoscale order, as dictated by equilibrium assembly through DNA-encoded interactions, and field-shaped macroscale morphology, as regulated by out-of-equilibrium materials formation through specific acoustic stimulation. Using optical and electron microscopy imaging and x-ray scattering, we further revealed the nucleation processes, domain fusion, and crystal growth under different acoustically stimulated conditions. The developed approach provides a pathway for the fabrication of complexly shaped macroscale morphologies for DNA-programmable nanomaterials by controlling spatiotemporal characteristics of the acoustic fields. DNA nanotechnology is useful in preparing nano- and meso-components, but transfer to macroscale arrangements is challenging. Here, the authors report an assembly approach combining DNA programmable assembly with process controlled by acoustic fields to prepare macroscale morphologies.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-51049-7