Affiliation:
1. Department of Physics, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117542, Singapore.
2. Integrated Science and Engineering Programme, NUS Graduate School, Singapore 119077, Singapore.
Abstract
Nanorobots powered by designed DNA molecular motors on DNA origami platforms are vigorously pursued but still short of fully autonomous and sustainable operation, as the reported systems rely on manually operated or autonomous but bridge-burning molecular motors. Expanding DNA nanorobotics requires origami-based autonomous non–bridge-burning motors, but such advanced artificial molecular motors are rare, and their integration with DNA origami remains a challenge. Here, we report an autonomous non–bridge-burning DNA motor tailor-designed for a triangle DNA origami substrate. This is a translational bipedal molecular motor but demonstrates effective translocation on both straight and curved segments of a self-closed circular track on the origami, including sharp ~90° turns by a single hand-over-hand step. The motor is highly directional and attains a record-high speed among the autonomous artificial molecular motors reported to date. The resultant DNA motor-origami system, with its complex translational-rotational motion and big nanorobotic capacity, potentially offers a self-contained “seed” nanorobotic platform to automate or scale up many applications.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Cited by
9 articles.
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