dna sequence design
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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (40) ◽  
pp. e2106808118
Author(s):  
Oliver G. Hayes ◽  
Benjamin E. Partridge ◽  
Chad A. Mirkin

The structural and functional diversity of materials in nature depends on the controlled assembly of discrete building blocks into complex architectures via specific, multistep, hierarchical assembly pathways. Achieving similar complexity in synthetic materials through hierarchical assembly is challenging due to difficulties with defining multiple recognition areas on synthetic building blocks and controlling the sequence through which those recognition sites direct assembly. Here, we show that we can exploit the chemical anisotropy of proteins and the programmability of DNA ligands to deliberately control the hierarchical assembly of protein–DNA materials. Through DNA sequence design, we introduce orthogonal DNA interactions with disparate interaction strengths (“strong” and “weak”) onto specific geometric regions of a model protein, stable protein 1 (Sp1). We show that the spatial encoding of DNA ligands leads to highly directional assembly via strong interactions and that, by design, the first stage of assembly increases the multivalency of weak DNA–DNA interactions that give rise to an emergent second stage of assembly. Furthermore, we demonstrate that judicious DNA design not only directs assembly along a given pathway but can also direct distinct structural outcomes from a single pathway. This combination of protein surface and DNA sequence design allows us to encode the structural and chemical information necessary into building blocks to program their multistep hierarchical assembly. Our findings represent a strategy for controlling the hierarchical assembly of proteins to realize a diverse set of protein–DNA materials by design.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Schoenit ◽  
Cristina Lo Giudice ◽  
Nina Hahnen ◽  
Dirk Ollech ◽  
Kevin Jahnke ◽  
...  

The binding strength between epithelial cells is crucial for tissue integrity, signal transduction and collective cell dynamics. However, there is no experimental approach to precisely modulate cell-cell adhesion strength at the cellular and molecular level. Here, we establish DNA nanotechnology as tool to control cell-cell adhesion of epithelial cells. We designed a DNA-E-cadherin hybrid system consisting of complementary DNA strands covalently bound to a truncated E-cadherin with a modified extracellular domain. DNA sequence design allows to tune the DNA-E-cadherin hybrid molecular binding strength, while retaining its cytosolic interactions and downstream signaling capabilities. The DNA-E-cadherin hybrid facilitates strong and reversible cell-cell adhesion in E-cadherin deficient cells by forming mechanotransducive adherens junctions. We assess the direct influence of cell-cell adhesion strength on intracellular signaling and collective cell dynamics. This highlights the scope of DNA nanotechnology as a precision technology to study and engineer cell collectives.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 1450-1459
Author(s):  
Ying Niu ◽  
Hangyu Zhou ◽  
Shida Wang ◽  
Kai Zhao ◽  
Xiaoxiao Wang ◽  
...  

The DNA sequence design is a vital step in reducing undesirable biochemical reactions and incorrect computations in successful DNA computing. To this end, many studies had concentrated on how to design higher quality DNA sequences. However, DNA sequences involve some thermodynamic and conflicting conditions, which in turn reflect the evolutionary algorithm process implemented through chemical reactions. In the present study, we applied an improved multi-objective particle swarm optimization (IMOPSO) algorithm to DNA sequence design, in which a chaotic map is combined with this algorithm to avoid falling into local optima. The experimental simulation and statistical results showed that the DNA sequence design method based on IMOPSO has higher reliability than the existing sequence design methods such as traditional evolutionary algorithm, invasive weed algorithm, and specialized methods.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niklas Tenhaef ◽  
Robert Stella ◽  
Julia Frunzke ◽  
Stephan Noack

Molecular cloning is the core of Synthetic Biology, as it comprises the assembly of DNA and its expression in target hosts. At present, however, cloning is most often a manual, time-consuming and repetitive process that highly benefits from automation. The automation of a complete rational cloning procedure, i.e., from DNA part creation to expression in the target host, involves the integration of different operations and machines. Examples of such workflows are sparse, especially when the design is rational (i.e., the DNA sequence design is fixed, and not based on randomized libraries) and the target host is less genetically tractable (e.g., not sensitive to heat-shock transformation). In this study, an automated workflow for the rational construction of plasmids and their subsequent conjugative transfer into the biotechnological platform organism Corynebacterium glutamicum is presented. The whole workflow is accompanied by a custom-made software tool. As an application example, a rationally designed library of transcription factor biosensors based on the regulator Lrp was constructed and characterized. A sensor with an improved dynamic range was obtained, and insights from the screening provided evidence for a dual regulator function of C. glutamicum Lrp.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (16) ◽  
pp. 4508-4509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentin Zulkower ◽  
Susan Rosser

Abstract Motivation Accounting for biological and practical requirements in DNA sequence design often results in challenging optimization problems. Current software solutions are problem-specific and hard to combine. Results DNA Chisel is an easy-to-use, easy-to-extend sequence optimization framework allowing to freely define and combine optimization specifications via Python scripts or Genbank annotations. Availability and implementation The framework is available as a web application (https://cuba.genomefoundry.org/sculpt_a_sequence) or open-source Python library (see at https://github.com/Edinburgh-Genome-Foundry/DNAChisel for code and documentation). Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 2749-2761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daša Pavc ◽  
Baifan Wang ◽  
Lea Spindler ◽  
Irena Drevenšek-Olenik ◽  
Janez Plavec ◽  
...  

Abstract GCn and GCnCG, where n = (G2AG4AG2), fold into well-defined, dimeric G-quadruplexes with unprecedented folding topologies in the presence of Na+ ions as revealed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Both G-quadruplexes exhibit unique combination of structural elements among which are two G-quartets, A(GGGG)A hexad and GCGC-quartet. Detailed structural characterization uncovered the crucial role of 5′-GC ends in formation of GCn and GCnCG G-quadruplexes. Folding in the presence of 15NH4+ and K+ ions leads to 3′–3′ stacking of terminal G-quartets of GCn G-quadruplexes, while 3′-GC overhangs in GCnCG prevent dimerization. Results of the present study expand repertoire of possible G-quadruplex structures. This knowledge will be useful in DNA sequence design for nanotechnological applications that may require specific folding topology and multimerization properties.


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