Limits of economy and fidelity for programmable assembly of size-controlled triply periodic polyhedra

We propose and investigate an extension of the Caspar-Klug symmetry principles for viral capsid assembly to the programmable assembly of size-controlled triply periodic polyhedra, discrete variants of the Primitive, Diamond, and Gyroid cubic minimal surfaces. Inspired by a recent class of programmab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-04, Vol.121 (18), p.e2315648121
Hauptverfasser: Duque, Carlos M, Hall, Douglas M, Tyukodi, Botond, Hagan, Michael F, Santangelo, Christian D, Grason, Gregory M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We propose and investigate an extension of the Caspar-Klug symmetry principles for viral capsid assembly to the programmable assembly of size-controlled triply periodic polyhedra, discrete variants of the Primitive, Diamond, and Gyroid cubic minimal surfaces. Inspired by a recent class of programmable DNA origami colloids, we demonstrate that the economy of design in these crystalline assemblies-in terms of the growth of the number of distinct particle species required with the increased size-scale (e.g., periodicity)-is comparable to viral shells. We further test the role of geometric specificity in these assemblies via dynamical assembly simulations, which show that conditions for simultaneously efficient and high-fidelity assembly require an intermediate degree of flexibility of local angles and lengths in programmed assembly. Off-target misassembly occurs via incorporation of a variant of disclination defects, generalized to the case of hyperbolic crystals. The possibility of these topological defects is a direct consequence of the very same symmetry principles that underlie the economical design, exposing a basic tradeoff between design economy and fidelity of programmable, size controlled assembly.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2315648121