Designer DNA architecture offers precise and multivalent spatial pattern-recognition for viral sensing and inhibition
计算机科学
组合化学
分子识别
核酸
作者
Paul S. Kwon,Shaokang Ren,Seok Joon Kwon,Megan E. Kizer,Lili Kuo,Mo Xie,Dan Zhu,Feng Zhou,Fuming Zhang,Domyoung Kim,Keith Fraser,Laura D. Kramer,Nadrian C. Seeman,Jonathan S. Dordick,Robert J. Linhardt,Jie Chao,Xing Wang
DNA, when folded into nanostructures with a specific shape, is capable of spacing and arranging binding sites into a complex geometric pattern with nanometre precision. Here we demonstrate a designer DNA nanostructure that can act as a template to display multiple binding motifs with precise spatial pattern-recognition properties, and that this approach can confer exceptional sensing and potent viral inhibitory capabilities. A star-shaped DNA architecture, carrying five molecular beacon-like motifs, was constructed to display ten dengue envelope protein domain III (ED3)-targeting aptamers into a two-dimensional pattern precisely matching the spatial arrangement of ED3 clusters on the dengue (DENV) viral surface. The resulting multivalent interactions provide high DENV-binding avidity. We show that this structure is a potent viral inhibitor and that it can act as a sensor by including a fluorescent output to report binding. Our molecular-platform design strategy could be adapted to detect and combat other disease-causing pathogens by generating the requisite ligand patterns on customized DNA nanoarchitectures.