The interest in DNA based nanostructures arises from their potential applications in diagnostics and drug delivery and in the development of new hybrid and conducting materials. Guanine-rich oligonucleotides can multimerize forming long and stable supramolecular structures, known as G-wires, based on the G-quadruplex (G4) motif. Herein, we report a method to easily obtain long DNA G-wires based on a new tetramolecular G4 subunit formed by the d(5 '-CGG-3 '-3 '-GGC-5 ') sequence containing a 3 '-3 ' inversion of polarity site. The formation of the G-wire assembly exploits the multimerization ability of G4s presenting the CGG motif at their 5 ' endvia pi-pi stacking interactions between flanking G4 subunits. The structures and the stability of the resulting G-wires were investigated by HPLC, size exclusion chromatography, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism,H-1 NMR and atomic force microscopy studies.
pi-pi stacked DNA G-wire nanostructures formed by a short G-rich oligonucleotide containing a 3 '-3 ' inversion of polarity site
Dardano Principia;Rea Ilaria;De Stefano Luca;
2020
Abstract
The interest in DNA based nanostructures arises from their potential applications in diagnostics and drug delivery and in the development of new hybrid and conducting materials. Guanine-rich oligonucleotides can multimerize forming long and stable supramolecular structures, known as G-wires, based on the G-quadruplex (G4) motif. Herein, we report a method to easily obtain long DNA G-wires based on a new tetramolecular G4 subunit formed by the d(5 '-CGG-3 '-3 '-GGC-5 ') sequence containing a 3 '-3 ' inversion of polarity site. The formation of the G-wire assembly exploits the multimerization ability of G4s presenting the CGG motif at their 5 ' endvia pi-pi stacking interactions between flanking G4 subunits. The structures and the stability of the resulting G-wires were investigated by HPLC, size exclusion chromatography, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism,H-1 NMR and atomic force microscopy studies.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.