Summary

Folding and Characterization of a Bio-responsive Robot from DNA Origami

Published: December 03, 2015
doi:

Summary

DNA origami is a powerful method for fabricating precise nanoscale objects by programming the self-assembly of DNA molecules. Here we describe a protocol for the folding of a bio-responsive robot from DNA origami, its purification and negative staining for transmission electron microscopic imaging (TEM).

Abstract

The DNA nanorobot is a hollow hexagonal nanometric device, designed to open in response to specific stimuli and present cargo sequestered inside. Both stimuli and cargo can be tailored according to specific needs. Here we describe the DNA nanorobot fabrication protocol, with the use of the DNA origami technique. The procedure initiates by mixing short single-strand DNA staples into a stock mixture which is then added to a long, circular, single-strand DNA scaffold in presence of a folding buffer. A standard thermo cycler is programmed to gradually lower the mixing reaction temperature to facilitate the staples-to-scaffold annealing, which is the guiding force behind the folding of the nanorobot. Once the 60 hr folding reaction is complete, excess staples are discarded using a centrifugal filter, followed by visualization via agarose-gel electrophoresis (AGE). Finally, successful fabrication of the nanorobot is verified by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), with the use of uranyl-formate as negative stain.

Introduction

The uses for nucleic acids nanotechnology are astounding. The tractability of the Watson-Crick base pairing as well as the ease and relative low-cost of large-scale synthesis of custom-made oligos2 has generated an explosion of applications3 and research in the field of DNA nanotechnology. Structural DNA nanotechnology, based on the immobile Seeman junction4,5 as a fundamental building block makes use of DNA as a self-assembling elementary unit for the construction of arbitrary shapes6-8.

The recent development of the scaffolded DNA origami9 technique allows for the construction of complex 2D/3D nano-architectures10-12 with sub-nanometer precision and is an efficient route for building new functional objects with increasing complexity and astonishing diversity. The construction process is based upon a long scaffold single stranded DNA, usually derived from a viral genome, which can be folded through the hybridization of hundreds of short single strand DNA oligos termed staples. The high structural resolution obtained by this technique is the direct result of the natural dimensions of the DNA double helix, while the reproducibility of fabrication is the result of tailoring the short single-strand staple sequences to facilitate the maximum hydrogen-bonding complementarity achievable. With the use of a slow temperature annealing ramp the designed lowest-energy, thermodynamically preferred nanostructure is reached in high yields and fidelity. The easy implementation of junction design rules in a computer code enabled the development of CAD tools, such as caDNAno13, that extremely simplify the task of designing large, complex structures containing hundreds of connected junctions.

Previously we described the design of a DNA nanorobot with the aid of the caDNAno tool14,15. Here we depict the fabrication and visualization, via transmission electron microscopy (TEM), of the nanorobot, a 3D hollow hexagonal nanodevice, with dimensions of 35 x 35 x 50 nm3, designed to undergo a major conformational change in response to a predetermined stimuli and present specific cargo, such as proteins or nucleic acid oligos, sequestered inside. While 12 loading stations are available inside the hollow chassis, the actual number of bound cargo differs with cargo size. Cargo molecules range from small DNA molecules to enzymes, antibodies and 5-10 nm gold nanoparticles. Cargocan either be uniform or heterogeneous, such that each nanorobot contains a mixture of different molecules. Sensing is achieved via two double helical locking gates design to sense proteins, nucleic acids or other chemicals, based either on aptasensor16,17 or DNA strand displacement18 technologies. Recent developments in aptamer selection protocols19-21 enable the design of nanorobots responding to an ever increasing range of molecules and cell types.

Earlier work showed a nanorobot carrying a specific antibody, which upon binding to its antigen can relay either an inhibitory or a prolific signal to the inside of specific cell types in a mixed cell population15. An exciting feature of these nanodevices is their ability to perform even more complex tasks and logic control with the introduction of different nanorobot subtypes in a single population. Recently we demonstrated specific subtypes of nanorobots performing as either positive or negative regulators, controlling an effector population containing an active cargo molecule22.

The protocol presented here describes the fabrication, purification and imaging of a nanorobot gated with aptamer sensor sequences which bind selectively to PDGF to facilitate the opening of the nanorobot15,22. The fabrication process described is similar to the nanorobot fabrication process initially depicted by Douglas et al.15 with changes aimed at reducing overall process duration, while increasing the yield and purification rates.

Protocol

1. Preparation of Staples Pool Mixture

  1. Order lyophilized DNA nanorobot staples on 96-well plates as listed in Table 1 (see Materials) and normalize to 10 nmol. For a detailed description of the design and architecture of the DNA nanorobot see Ben-Ishay et al.14 and Douglas et al.15).
  2. Reconstitute each staple well with DNase/RNase-free ultrapure to a concentration of 100 µM. For staples normalized to 10 nmol, reconstitute with 100 µl of ultrapure water.
  3. Pool together 20 µl of each staple using a multichannel pipettor and a sterile 55 ml solution basin.
    Note: Since the nanorobot shape is comprised of 254 staple strands (including Core, Edges, Handles and Guides sequences, Table 1), the concentration of each of the staples in the staples pool is 394 nM. Removing staples from the staple pool, or adding some at different volumes, may reduce the yield considerably, or otherwise result in unfolded aggregates.

2. Preparation of Fabrication Reaction Mixture

  1. For a standard reaction mixture use 40 µl of M13mp18 viral genome circular single strand DNA, corresponding to 4 pmol of scaffold DNA (100 nM stock solution, see Materials). Final concentration of scaffold in the fabrication mixture is 20 nM, final volume 200 µl.
    1. Adjust the amount of scaffold DNA according to specific needs; however, keep the final concentration of scaffold DNA in the reaction mixture at a constant 20 nM.
  2. Add staples to reach a scaffold to staples ratio of 1 to 10, respectively. For a 20 nM scaffold DNA concentration, each of the 254 staples’ final concentration is 200 nM. For a 200 µl final reaction volume add 102 µl of the staples pool mixture (section 1.2).
    1. Add specific Gate sequences separately to the folding reaction mixture at this time. These oligos are ordered separately and require HPLC purification. Ensure that Gate oligos are present in a 1:10 scaffold to Gate sequence ratio, i.e. 200 nM of each oligo for a 20 nM scaffold concentration. For a 200 µl folding reaction volume, add 0.4 µl for each of the four Gate oligo at a 100 µM stock concentration.
  3. Add 10x TAE stock buffer to reach a final concentration of 1x TAE (40 mM Tris-Acetate, 1 mM EDTA). For a 200 µl folding reaction volume, add 20 µl of 10x TAE.
  4. Add 1 M MgCl2 to a final concentration of 10 mM. For a 200 µl folding reaction volume, add 2 µl of 1 M MgCl2.
  5. Add 36 µl of DNase/RNase free ultrapure water to a reach a final volume of 200 µl.
  6. Vortex and aliquot 100 µl samples into PCR vials.
    Note: Consult thermal cycler specification regarding the maximum reaction volumes to be used. Reducing the volume to meet these limits will not reduce the yields obtained. Reaction volumes above the maximum specified will jeopardize the yields.

3. Temperature Annealing Ramp of Fabrication Reaction

  1. Program thermal cycler as followed:
    1. Ramp 85 °C to 60 °C at a rate of 5 min/°C.
    2. Ramp 60 °C to 4 °C at a rate of 75 min/°C.
    3. Hold at 4 °C indefinitely.
  2. After fabrication has ended store samples at -20 °C.

4. Removal of Excess Staples

  1. Add 100 µl of folding reaction mixture to a 0.5 ml centrifugal filter with a MWCO of 100 kDa. Save a 10 µl sample of nanorobots pre-purification for later analysis.
  2. Centrifuge for 10 min at 9,600 x g.
  3. Add 400 µl of folding buffer (1x TAE, 10 mM MgCl2).
  4. Repeat steps 4.2 and 4.3 twice more.
  5. Centrifuge for 5 min at 9,600 x g.
  6. Recover the concentrate by placing the filter upside down in a clean microcentrifuge tube and spin for 1 min at 9,600 x g. Final volumes may vary depending on the initial volume of fabrication reaction mixture that was put into the filter. Typically a 25-60 µl final volume of concentrated nanorobot sample is obtained.
  7. Measure concentration of DNA in the samples via spectrophotometer at 260 nm. Use molecular weight of 5.3 µg/pmol when calculating molar concentrations of nanorobot samples.
    Note: The molar extinction coefficient for dsDNA, 50 µg/OD260, is sufficient for most applications. 48 µg/OD260 takes into account the poly thymine ssDNA stretches at the Edges staples.

5. Agarose Gel Electrophoresis Analysis of Folded Nanorobots

  1. Preparation of 0.5x TBE (45 mM Tris-Borate, 1 mM EDTA), 2% agarose gel supplemented with 10 mM MgCl2 (adapted from Ernesto Castro et al.21):
    1. Prepare 0.5x TBE buffer by diluting 6.25 ml of 10x TBE stock buffer in 118.75 ml of ddH2O.
    2. Dissolve 2.5 g of agarose in 125 ml of 0.5x TBE buffer.
    3. Boil in microwave until the agarose is completely dissolved.
    4. Add 1.25 ml of 1 M MgCl2 to final concentration of 10 mM.
    5. Add 7 µl of 10 mg/ml ethidium bromide.
    6. Wait for solution to slightly cool and fill the gel tray before the agarose gel solidifies. Install desired comb immediately.
    7. Prepare 1 L 0.5x TBE running buffer by adding 50 ml of 10x TBE stock buffer and 10 ml of 1 M MgCl2 to 940 ml of ddH2O.
    8. Once gel is solid add running buffer to the electrophoresis device and put device in an ice bath.
  2. Load 1 µg total DNA of the nanorobots pre-purification (step 3.2), and post purification (step 4.7), alongside a scaffold DNA sample and a 1 kb DNA marker, onto the gel. An example is given in Figure 2. Actual volumes of samples depend on the concentrations obtained after purification. Each samples is loaded with loading buffer at a 1:6 final volume ratio.
  3. Set power source to 80 V and run gel for 3 hr. Run the gel in a bath filled with ice and water. Nanorobots will unfold and appear as a smear if the agarose gel heats up during electrophoresis. During electrophoresis add additional ice to keep device from heating.
  4. View gel on a UV table (Figure 2).

6. Negative Stain of Nanorobot with Uranyl-formate

  1. Preparation of 2% uranyl-formate stock solution (adapted from Castro et al.23):
    1. Weigh 100 mg of uranyl-formate powder into a 15 ml tube.
    2. Boil DNase/RNase free ultrapure water for 3 min to de-oxygenate.
    3. Add 5 ml of deoxygenated hot water (~60 °C) into the 15 ml tube containing the uranyl-formate powder (from previous step). Tightly close lid, wrap in aluminum foil and vortex rigorously for 10 min (fasten tube to a vortex). Solution should appear turbid with a yellow color.
    4. Filter solution through a 0.2 µm syringe filter. Solution should become clear.
    5. Aliquot 200 µl of the solution into microcentrifuge tubes.
    6. Centrifuge at max speed for 5 min in a table top centrifuge to pool samples at the bottom of the tube.
  2. Loading of sample to grid and negative staining:
    1. Defrost a 200 µl aliquot of 2% uranyl-formate solution (prepared in section 6.1). Add 10 µl of 0.5 M NaOH solution and vortex rigorously for 3 min. Centrifuge at max speed for 5 minutes using a table top centrifuge.
    2. Meanwhile, glow-discharge grid using room air at 0.2 mbar and 25 mA for 30 sec.
    3. Add 15 µl of 2 nM nanorobot sample after purification (section 4.7) onto topside of grid (held with forceps) and let absorb for 1 min. Use filter paper to drain the excess liquid by placing the grid on top of the filter paper. Do not touch the grid surface.
    4. Add 10 µl of the 2% uranyl-formate (from step 6.2.1) onto the topside of grid (held with forceps).
    5. Quickly use filter paper to drain the excess liquid by placing the grid on top of the filter paper. Do not touch the grid surface.
    6. Repeat steps 6.2.4 and 6.2.5.
    7. Add 10 µl of the 2% uranyl-formate (from step 6.2.1) onto the topside of grid (held with forceps). Let staining solution absorb for 30 sec.
    8. Use filter paper to drain the excess liquid by placing the grid on top of the filter paper. Do not touch the grid surface.
    9. Let the grid dry completely for at least 30 min, face up on a filter paper, before injecting into the TEM.

Representative Results

Representative results are shown in Figure 2A. All lanes contain 1 µg of total DNA, measured via spectrophotometer (OD260). Compared with the circular single-strand DNA scaffold (Lane 2), nanorobots are hindered in the gel due to their higher molecular weight, the result of staples hybridization to the scaffold DNA (Lane 3. Red arrow). The low molecular weight band in Lane 3 represents excess staples which did not bind to the scaffold DNA (Green arrow). After purification via centrifugal filtration most of the excess staples are removed (Lanes 4-6) and the nanorobots are ready to be loaded with cargo molecules conjugated to the Handles complementary strand14,15,22. Lanes 4-6 contain high molecular weight bands representing nanorobot dimers (Blue arrow), a population of nanorobots which are bound together. Reducing the concentration of the scaffold in the fabrication procedure (to either 5 or 10 nM) can potentially reduce the relative amount of these high molecular weight structures. Lanes 4-6 show nanorobots post-purification with slight variations to the described purification protocol, namely the initial volume of fabricated nanorobots added to the spin filter (Step 4.1. Lane 4: 50 µl; Lane 5: 100 µl; Lane 6: 100 µl), and the number of times the buffer was added to the filter (Step 4.4. Lane 4: 2 times; Lane 5: 2 times; Lane 6: 5 times).

Comparison of the yield and purification results between the different variations to the protocol (Figure 2C) show that reducing the initial volume of fabricated robots loaded unto the centrifugal filter (Step 4.1) has little effect on the yield and purification rates. Moreover, increasing the number of buffer exchanges and centrifugal spins (steps 4.4) has marginal influence on the purity on the nanorobots, while considerably reducing the yield. Hence the described protocol, corresponding to 100 µl initial volume and 2 buffer additions (Lane 5), is considered optimal.

Yield estimations are based on spectrophotometer (OD260) measurements of each sample post-purification and calculated relative to the initial amount loaded into each centrifugal filter. Purification is based on the weight percent of the nanorobots from the entire DNA in the sample, corresponding to the nanorobots and excess staples which did not wash out during purification. Purification estimations are calculated from the relative intensity of the nanorobots (red and blue arrows in Figure 2A) to that of the excess staples (green arrow in Figure 2B). The relative nanorobots/staples intensities were normalized with the pre-purified sample (Lane 3), in which the total DNA weight of the staples (green arrow) is ~4.5 times that of the unpurified nanorobots (red arrow), corresponding to the initial 10:1 scaffold to staples molar ratio in the fabrication protocol.

Final validation of structural integrity is achieved via transmission electron microscopy using 2% uranyl-formate as a negative stain. Photos are presented in Figure 3.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Design schematic of the nanorobot. (A) Side view of a closed nanorobot. Gate double helix, produced by an aptamer sequence and a complementary strand, is indicated by a green arrow. (B) Front view of a closed nanorobot showing protein cargo bound inside. (C) Cross-section schematics of closed nanorobot produced. Handles staples are highlighted by a red arrow. Green circles indicate helixes which contain a hinge on one side and a gate sequence at the opposite side. (D) Blueprints of a nanorobot at side view. Handles are indicated by red arrows. Gate sequences are indicated by green arrows. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 2
Figure 2: Agarose gel electrophoresis results. (A) Lane 1: 1kb Marker. Lane 2: M13mp18 circular single-strand scaffold. Lane 3: nanorobots pre-purification. Lanes 4-6: nanorobots post purifications. Lane 4: 50 µl initial volume; 2 buffer additions. Lane 5: 100 µl initial volume; 2 buffer additions. Lane 6: 100 µl initial volume; 5 buffer additions. Excess staples are indicated by a green arrow Fabricated nanorobots are indicated by a red arrow. Blue arrow indicated nanorobot dimers. (B) 3D view of the relative intensity of the bands in the agarose gel. (C) Yield and purification estimations.

Figure 3
Figure 3: TEM photo of DNA nanorobots taken from multiple fabrications/staining procedures.

Number Designation Sequence
1 Core AAAAACCAAACCCTCGTTGTGAATATGGTTTGGTC
2 Core GGAAGAAGTGTAGCGGTCACGTTATAATCAGCAGACTGATAG
3 Core TACGATATAGATAATCGAACAACA
4 Core CTTTTGCTTAAGCAATAAAGCGAGTAGA
5 Core GTCTGAAATAACATCGGTACGGCCGCGCACGG
6 Core GGAAGAGCCAAACAGCTTGCAGGGAACCTAA
7 Core AAAATCACCGGAAGCAAACTCTGTAGCT
8 Core CCTACATGAAGAACTAAAGGGCAGGGCGGAGCCCCGGGC
9 Core CATGTAAAAAGGTAAAGTAATAAGAACG
10 Core ATTAAATCAGGTCATTGCCTGTCTAGCTGATAAATTGTAATA
11 Core ATAGTCGTCTTTTGCGGTAATGCC
12 Core AGTCATGGTCATAGCTGAACTCACTGCCAGT
13 Core AACTATTGACGGAAATTTGAGGGAATATAAA
14 Core ATCGCGTCTGGAAGTTTCATTCCATATAGAAAGACCATC
15 Core AAATATTGAACGGTAATCGTAGCCGGAGACAGTCATAAAAAT
16 Core GTCTTTACAGGATTAGTATTCTAACGAGCATAGAACGC
17 Core GCACCGCGACGACGCTAATGAACAGCTG
18 Core AACTTCATTTTAGAATCGCAAATC
19 Core CGTAGAGTCTTTGTTAAGGCCTTCGTTTTCCTACCGAG
20 Core CCAATCAAAGGCTTATCCGGTTGCTATT
21 Core AGAGGCGATATAATCCTGATTCATCATA
22 Core CCGTAATCCCTGAATAATAACGGAATACTACG
23 Core AAATGGTATACAGGGCAAGGAAATC
24 Core TCCTCATCGTAACCAAGACCGACA
25 Core CATTATCTGGCTTTAGGGAATTATGTTTGGATTAC
26 Core ACCCGCCCAATCATTCCTCTGTCC
27 Core CGACCAGTCACGCAGCCACCGCTGGCAAAGCGAAAGAAC
28 Core CTAAAGGCGTACTATGGTTGCAACAGGAGAGA
29 Core TTGGCAGGCAATACAGTGTTTCTGCGCGGGCG
30 Core TATACAGGAAATAAAGAAATTTTGCCCGAACGTTAAGACTTT
31 Core AAGTATAGTATAAACAGTTAACTGAATTTACCGTTGAGCCAC
32 Core ACATTCAGATAGCGTCCAATATTCAGAA
33 Core AAACATCTTTACCCTCACCAGTAAAGTGCCCGCCC
34 Core GAGATGACCCTAATGCCAGGCTATTTTT
35 Core TCCTGAATTTTTTGTTTAACGATCAGAGCGGA
36 Core GCCGAAAAATCTAAAGCCAATCAAGGAAATA
37 Core AGCGTAGCGCGTTTTCACAAAATCTATGTTAGCAAACGAACGCAACAAA
38 Core ACCAATCGATTAAATTGCGCCATTATTA
39 Core ATCTTACTTATTTTCAGCGCCGACAGGATTCA
40 Core CCCTAAAAGAACCCAGTCACA
41 Core GGAAGGGCGAAAATCGGGTTTTTCGCGTTGCTCGT
42 Core CAGACCGGAAGCCGCCATTTTGATGGGGTCAGTAC
43 Core TAATATTGGAGCAAACAAGAGATCAATATGATATTGCCTTTA
44 Core TTCCTTATAGCAAGCAAATCAAATTTTA
45 Core ACTACGAGGAGATTTTTTCACGTTGAAACTTGCTTT
46 Core AAACAGGCATGTCAATCATATAGATTCAAAAGGGTTATATTT
47 Core AACAGGCACCAGTTAAAGGCCGCTTTGTGAATTTCTTA
48 Core TTCCTGAGTTATCTAAAATATTCAGTTGTTCAAATAGCAG
49 Core AAAGAAACAAGAGAAGATCCGGCT
50 Core TTGAGGGTTCTGGTCAGGCTGTATAAGC
51 Core TTTAACCGTCAATAGTGAATTCAAAAGAAGATGATATCGCGC
52 Core ACGAGCGCCCAATCCAAATAAAATTGAGCACC
53 Core AATAAGTCGAAGCCCAATAATTATTTATTCTT
54 Core ACGAAATATCATAGATTAAGAAACAATGGAACTGA
55 Core TTTCATAGTTGTACCGTAACACTGGGGTTTT
56 Core AGGAGCGAGCACTAACAACTAAAACCCTATCACCTAACAGTG
57 Core CAAAGTATTAATTAGCGAGTTTCGCCACAGAACGA
58 Core TGGGGAGCTATTTGACGACTAAATACCATCAGTTT
59 Core ATAACGCAATAGTAAAATGTTTAAATCA
60 Core ACGAATCAACCTTCATCTTATACCGAGG
61 Core TAATGGTTTGAAATACGCCAA
62 Core CGGAACAAGAGCCGTCAATAGGCACAGACAATATCCTCAATC
63 Core ATTAAAGGTGAATTATCAAAGGGCACCACGG
64 Core GGCAACCCATAGCGTAAGCAGCGACCATTAA
65 Core AGAAACGTAAGCAGCCACAAGGAAACGATCTT
66 Core AGAGGTCTTTAGGGGGTCAAAAGGCAGT
67 Core GGGGACTTTTTCATGAGGACCTGCGAGAATAGAAAGGAGGAT
68 Core TTTTAGAACATCCAATAAATCCAATAAC
69 Core AAATGTGGTAGATGGCCCGCTTGGGCGC
70 Core ACGGATCGTCACCCTCACGATCTAGAATTTT
71 Core CGCCATAAGACGACGACAATAGCTGTCT
72 Core GCGTATTAGTCTTTAATCGTAAGAATTTACA
73 Core AGAGAACGTGAATCAAATGCGTATTTCCAGTCCCC
74 Core AACGAAAAAGCGCGAAAAAAAGGCTCCAAAAGG
75 Core TAATTTAGAACGCGAGGCGTTAAGCCTT
76 Core ACCAGGCGTGCATCATTAATTTTTTCAC
77 Core CAGCCTGACGACAGATGTCGCCTGAAAT
78 Core ATTAGTCAGATTGCAAAGTAAGAGTTAAGAAGAGT
79 Core CTCGAATGCTCACTGGCGCAT
80 Core GGGCAGTCACGACGTTGAATAATTAACAACC
81 Core TAAAAACAGGGGTTTTGTTAGCGAATAATATAATAGAT
82 Core TCAACCCTCAGCGCCGAATATATTAAGAATA
83 Core ATTATACGTGATAATACACATTATCATATCAGAGA
84 Core GCAAATCTGCAACAGGAAAAATTGC
85 Core ATAATTACTAGAAATTCTTAC
86 Core TATCACCGTGCCTTGAGTAACGCGTCATACATGGCCCCTCAG
87 Core AAGTAGGGTTAACGCGCTGCCAGCTGCA
88 Core CCAGTAGTTAAGCCCTTTTTAAGAAAAGCAAA
89 Core TGGCGAAGTTGGGACTTTCCG
90 Core CAGTGAGTGATGGTGGTTCCGAAAACCGTCTATCACGATTTA
91 Core AAATCAAAGAGAATAACATAACTGAACACAGT
92 Core CTGTATGACAACTAGTGTCGA
93 Core ATCATAAATAGCGAGAGGCTTAGCAAAGCGGATTGTTCAAAT
94 Core TTGAGTAATTTGAGGATTTAGCTGAAAGGCGCGAAAGATAAA
95 Core ATAAGAATAAACACCGCTCAA
96 Core CGTTGTAATTCACCTTCTGACAAGTATTTTAA
97 Core AACCGCCTCATAATTCGGCATAGCAGCA
98 Core AAATAGGTCACGTTGGTAGCGAGTCGCGTCTAATTCGC
99 Core CAGTATAGCCTGTTTATCAACCCCATCC
100 Core TTGCACCTGAAAATAGCAGCCAGAGGGTCATCGATTTTCGGT
101 Core CGTCGGAAATGGGACCTGTCGGGGGAGA
102 Core AAGAAACTAGAAGATTGCGCAACTAGGG
103 Core CCAGAACCTGGCTCATTATACAATTACG
104 Core ACGGGTAATAAATTAAGGAATTGCGAATAGTA
105 Core CCACGCTGGCCGATTCAAACTATCGGCCCGCT
106 Core GCCTTCACCGAAAGCCTCCGCTCACGCCAGC
107 Core CAGCATTAAAGACAACCGTCAAAAATCA
108 Core ACATCGGAAATTATTTGCACGTAAAAGT
109 Core CAACGGTCGCTGAGGCTTGATACCTATCGGTTTATCAGATCT
110 Core AAATCGTACAGTACATAAATCAGATGAA
111 Core TTAACACACAGGAACACTTGCCTGAGTATTTG
112 Core AGGCATAAGAAGTTTTGCCAGACCCTGA
113 Core GACGACATTCACCAGAGATTAAAGCCTATTAACCA
114 Core AGCTGCTCGTTAATAAAACGAGAATACC
115 Core CTTAGAGTACCTTTTAAACAGCTGCGGAGATTTAGACTA
116 Core CACCCTCTAATTAGCGTTTGCTACATAC
117 Core GAACCGAAAATTGGGCTTGAGTACCTTATGCGATTCAACACT
118 Core GCAAGGCAGATAACATAGCCGAACAAAGTGGCAACGGGA
119 Core ATGAAACAATTGAGAAGGAAACCGAGGATAGA
120 Core GGATGTGAAATTGTTATGGGGTGCACAGTAT
121 Core GGCTTGCGACGTTGGGAAGAACAGATAC
122 Core TAAATGCCTACTAATAGTAGTTTTCATT
123 Core TGCCGTCTGCCTATTTCGGAACCAGAATGGAAAGCCCACCAGAAC
124 Core TGACCATAGCAAAAGGGAGAACAAC
125 Core CGAGCCAGACGTTAATAATTTGTATCA
126 Core GCTCAGTTTCTGAAACATGAAACAAATAAATCCTCCCGCCGC
127 Core AGACGCTACATCAAGAAAACACTTTGAA
128 Core AGTACTGACCAATCCGCGAAGTTTAAGACAG
129 Core GATTCCTGTTACGGGCAGTGAGCTTTTCCTGTGTGCTG
130 Core GGTATTAAGGAATCATTACCGAACGCTA
131 Core GTTCATCAAATAAAACGCGACTCTAGAGGATCGGG
132 Core AGCCTTTAATTGGATAGTTGAACCGCCACCCTCATAGGTG
133 Core ACAGAGGCCTGAGATTCTTTGATTAGTAATGG
134 Core AACGAGATCAGGATTAGAGAGCTTAATT
135 Core TACCAAGTTATACTTCTGAATCACCAGA
136 Core CAGTAGGTGTTCAGCTAATGCGTAGAAA
137 Core AGGATGACCATAGACTGACTAATGAAATCTACATTCAGCAGGCGCGTAC
138 Core TTTCAACCAAGGCAAAGAATTTAGATAC
139 Core TTGAAATTAAGATAGCTTAACTAT
140 Core CTATTATCGAGCTTCAAAGCGTATGCAA
141 Core CAGGGTGCAAAATCCCTTATAGACTCCAACGTCAAAAGCCGG
142 Core GAGCTTGTTAATGCGCCGCTAATTTTAGCGCCTGCTGCTGAA
143 Core CGAACGTTAACCACCACACCCCCAGAATTGAG
144 Core GTGTGATAAATAAGTGAGAAT
145 Core GCTATATAGCATTAACCCTCAGAGA
146 Core AGGAGAGCCGGCAGTCTTGCCCCCGAGAGGGAGGG
147 Core CGGCCTCCAGCCAGAGGGCGAGCCCCAA
148 Core CCAAAACAAAATAGGCTGGCTGACGTAACAA
149 Core GGCGGTTAGAATAGCCCGAGAAGTCCACTATTAAAAAGGAAG
150 Core ATAAAGGTTACCAGCGCTAATTCAAAAACAGC
151 Core ATTGCCCCCAGCAGGCGAAAAGGCCCACTACGTGACGGAACC
152 Core TTTTAAAACATAACAGTAATGGAACGCTATTAGAACGC
153 Core AATTGGGTAACGCCAGGCTGTAGCCAGCTAGTAAACGT
154 Edge TTACCCAGAACAACATTATTACAGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
155 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAATAAGAGAATA
156 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCCAGTTTGGGAGCGGGCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
157 Edge GGTTGAGGCAGGTCAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
158 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGATTAAGACTCCTTATCCAAAAGGAAT
159 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTCGCTATTACAATT
160 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTGCGGGAGAAGCGCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
161 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGGAATTAGAGAAACAATGAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
162 Edge TCAGACTGACAGAATCAAGTTTGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
163 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGTCGAGGTGCCGTAAAGCAGCACGT
164 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAATCATTTACCAGACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
165 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTCATTCTGGCCAAATTCGACAACTCTTTTTTTTTTTTT
166 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTACCGGATATTCA
167 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAGACGGGAAACTGGCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
168 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCAGCAAGCGGTCCACGCTGCCCAAAT
169 Edge CTGAGAGAGTTGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
170 Edge CAATGACAACAACCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
171 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGAGAGATCTACAAGGAGAGG
172 Edge TCACCAGTACAAACTATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
173 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTGGCAATTCATCAAATTATTCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
174 Edge TAAAGTTACCGCACTCATCGAGAACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
175 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCACCCTCAGAACCGCC
176 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTAGGTTTAACGTCAATATATGTGAGTTTTTTTTTTTTT
177 Edge CCACACAACATACGTTTTTTTTTTTTT
178 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGCTAGGGCGAGTAAAAGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
179 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAGTTGATTCCCAATTCTGCGAACCTCA
180 Edge TTATTTAGAGCCTAATTTGCCAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
181 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTACGGCGGAT
182 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTATATGCGTTAAGTCCTGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
183 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTACGATTGGCCTTGATA
184 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCAACGCCTGTAGCATT
185 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGCTTTGAGCCGGAACGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
186 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAAGCAAGCCGTTT
187 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTATGTGTAGGTAAGTACCCCGGTTGTTTTTTTTTTTTT
188 Edge ATCGTCATAAATATTCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
189 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGTTAATTTCATCT
190 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTGTATTAAATCCTGCGTAGATTTTCTTTTTTTTTTTTT
191 Edge GCCATATAAGAGCAAGCCAGCCCGACTTGAGCCATGGTT
192 Edge GTAGCTAGTACCAAAAACATTCATAAAGCTAAATCGGTTTTTTTTTTTTT
193 Edge ATAACGTGCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
194 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAAAATACCGAACGAACCACCAGTGAGAATTAAC
195 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTACAAAATAAACA
196 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTACAAGAAAAACCTCCCGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
197 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGACGATAAAAAGATTAAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
198 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTCAATTACCTGAGTATCAAAATCATTTTTTTTTTTTTT
199 Edge GGTACGGCCAGTGCCAAGCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
200 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTGAATAACCTTGAAATATATTTTATTTTTTTTTTTTT
201 Edge CACTAAAACACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
202 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAACCAATATGGGAACAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
203 Edge TACGTCACAATCAATAGAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
204 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAGAAAGATTCATCAGTTGA
205 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTGTGGCATCAATTAATGCCTGAGTATTTTTTTTTTTTT
206 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGCATGCCTGCATTAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
207 Edge CCAGCGAAAGAGTAATCTTGACAAGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
208 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGAATCCCCCTCAAATGCTT
209 Edge AGAGGCTGAGACTCCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
210 Edge ACAAACACAGAGATACATCGCCATTATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
211 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCAAGAGAAGGATTAGG
212 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTGAATTGAGGAAGTTATCAGATGATTTTTTTTTTTTTT
213 Edge CAGAACAATATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
214 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTAGCCGGAAGCATAAAGTGTCCTGGCC
215 Edge TGACCGTTTCTCCGGGAACGCAAATCAGCTCATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
216 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGTAATAAGTTTTAAC
217 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTGTCTGTCCATAATAAAAGGGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
218 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCCTCGTTAGAATCAGAGCGTAATATC
219 Edge AATTGCTCCTTTTGATAAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
220 Edge CATCGGACAGCCCTGCTAAACAACTTTCAACAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
221 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAACCGCCTCCCTCAGACCAGAGC
222 Edge TCTGACAGAGGCATTTTCGAGCCAGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
223 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCAGCGGAGTTCCATGTCATAAGG
224 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCGCCCACGCATAACCG
225 Edge AATTACTTAGGACTAAATAGCAACGGCTACAGATTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
226 Edge CAAGTTTTTTGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
227 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCCTTTAGCGCACCACCGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
228 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGAATCGGCCGAGTGTTGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
229 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTCATCTTTGACCC
230 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTATAATCAGAAAATCGGTGCGGGCCTTTTTTTTTTTTT
231 Edge GATACAGGAGTGTACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
232 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGCGCAGACAATTTCAACTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
233 Edge GGAGGTTTAGTACCGCTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
234 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTACCGCCAGCCATAACAGTTGAAAGTTTTTTTTTTTTT
235 Edge TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTATAGCAATAGCT
236 Handles AATAAGTTTTGCAAGCCCAATAGGGGATAAGTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
237 Handles ACATAGCTTACATTTAACAATAATAACGTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
238 Handles CCTTTTTGAATGGCGTCAGTATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
239 Handles CGTAACCAATTCATCAACATTTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
240 Handles CACCAACCGATATTCATTACCATTATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
241 Handles CCACCCTCATTTTCTTGATATTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
242 Handles AACTTTGAAAGAGGAGAAACATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
243 Handles CAAGGCGCGCCATTGCCGGAATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
244 Handles CATAGCCCCCTTAAGTCACCATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
245 Handles TTTCCCTGAATTACCTTTTTTACCTTTTTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
246 Handles AACGGTGTACAGACTGAATAATTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
247 Handles GATTCGCGGGTTAGAACCTACCATTTTGTTGTGCTACTCCAGTTC
248 Guides AGAGTAGGATTTCGCCAACATGTTTTAAAAACC
249 Guides ACGGTGACCTGTTTAGCTGAATATAATGCCAAC
250 Guides CGTAGCAATTTAGTTCTAAAGTACGGTGTTTTA
251 Guides GCTTAATGCGTTAAATGTAAATGCTGATCTTGAAATGAGCGTT
252 Guides AAGCCAACGGAATCTAGGTTGGGTTATATAGATTAAGCAACTG
253 Guides TTTAACAACCGACCCAATCGCAAGACAAAATTAATCTCACTGC
254 Guides TTTAGGCCTAAATTGAGAAAACTTTTTCCTTCTGTTCCTAGAT
255 Guides Removal GGTTTTTAAAACATGTTGGCGAAATCCTACTCT
256 Guides Removal GTTGGCATTATATTCAGCTAAACAGGTCACCGT
257 Guides Removal TAAAACACCGTACTTTAGAACTAAATTGCTACG
258 Guides Removal AACGCTCATTTCAAGATCAGCATTTACATTTAACGCATTAAGC
259 Guides Removal CAGTTGCTTAATCTATATAACCCAACCTAGATTCCGTTGGCTT
260 Guides Removal GCAGTGAGATTAATTTTGTCTTGCGATTGGGTCGGTTGTTAAA
261 Guides Removal ATCTAGGAACAGAAGGAAAAAGTTTTCTCAATTTAGGCCTAAA
262 Gates Gate29 TGGGGCGCGAGCTGAAAAGTACTCAGGGCACTGCAAGCAATTGTGGTCCCAATGGGCTGAGTA
263 Gates Gate30 TACTCAGCCCATTGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAGGTCTGAGAGACTACCTT
264 Gates Gate0 TGATGAGCGTGGATGATACTCAGCCCATTGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTAGGTCATTTTTGCG­GATGG
265 Gates Gate61 ATACAAAAAGCCTGTTTAGTATCTACTCAGGGCACTGCAAGCAATTGTGGTCCCAATGGGCTGAGTA

Table 1: List of staple sequences used to construct the nanorobot. Staples 1-153 are designated Core and make up the bulk of the structure. Staples 154-235 are designated Edges and are situated at each of the ends of the 61 helixes of the structure. Edge staples contain a poly thymine tail designed to avoid aggregation of nanorobots. Staples 236-247 are designated Handles and make up the cargo docking sites. Handles staples have a unique sequence region, connecting them to their specific location of the structure, and a consensus sequence region which is used as docking site for the cargo molecules. Staples 248-254 are designated Guides and attach the two halves of the device during the annealing process. After fabrication the Guides are removed with the addition of Guide Removal staples 255-261 (step 6), leaving the device locked by the two sensors of the nanorobot. Sensor sequences are designated Gates. Each of the two sensors is made up of a PDGF aptamer and a complementary strand. For a more detailed explanation see Ben-Ishay et al.14 and Douglas et al.15. Staples are ordered commercially on three 96-well plates (deep round bottom). Each staple amount is normalized to 10 nmol. Except for the Gate sequences, which require HPLC purification, staples do not require a special purification procedure.

Discussion

We described the fabrication, purification, and visualization of the DNA nanorobot. Following fabrication of the hexagonal chassis of the device, the function of the nanorobot is programmed with the simple introduction of specific cargo and sensing strands to the robot which readily find their designated position due to hydrogen-bonding complementarity with available single-strand docking sites14,15,22.

The fabrication protocol described uses a slow annealing ramp, which is generally used in our lab to fold a wide range of origami shapes. If production time becomes a key factor other protocols, such as the rapid folding protocol described by Sobczak et al.24 can be used. This protocol is reported to achieve origami folding in high yields, however it requires calibration for each origami shape.

Spin filtration is used to purify the robots from excess staples. When loading the spin column with samples or buffer, care should be taken not to damage the membrane with the pipette tip. The membrane can potentially rupture resulting in dramatically reduced yields. It is advisable to not discard the flow-through until the nanorobots are visualized by AGE.

For certain application a higher purification rate is desired; this can be achieved by repeating the filtration using the original spin column. For even higher purity, a new spin column can be used, however this will have a dramatic negative effect on the yield rates. Other methods for purifying DNA origami structures were tested, such as excision from agarose gel subsequent to electrophoresis and dialysis of excess staples. These methods resulted in either poor yield or poor purification rates compared with the described protocol. Other methods, such as PEG-based purification25 and rate-zonal ultracentrifugation26 were not tested. These methods are reported to achieve high purification rates, however they either result in poor yields (rate-zonal ultracentrifugation) or require precipitation (PEG-based) which can potentially harm the hollow nanorobot shape.

Nanorobots are fabricated with Guide staples which lock the shape in the closed position in order to increase fabrication yeilds15. It is important to remove these staples by adding Guide Removal staples for nanorobots to effectively open in response to the designed stimuli (PDGF in the described protocol). Guide staples are designed with a toehold single strand region for the docking of Guide Removal staples which release the Guide staples through a process of strand displacement18.These staples should be added at a 10:1 molar ratio at the end of the purification of excess staples’ stage (step 4.7) and incubated for 2 hr at room temperature on an end over end shaker.

Visualization by TEM was described, including uranyl-formate 2% negative staining. Compared with uranyl-acetate, uranyl-formate produces finer grain structures which allow for better resolution of DNA origami designs. Care should be taken as uranyl-formate will solidify if aliquots are frozen for long periods of time. It is advisable to use a freshly prepared 2% uranyl-formate solution for staining. Better resolutions are achievable with the use of Cryo-TEM27.

The basic architectural design and fabrication protocol of the DNA nanorobot are ultimately uniform and straightforward. However, a wide range of flexibility is offered in the form of specific cargo mixtures and sensing strands. Moreover, in a single population many subtypes can be introduced and their relative stoichiometry programmed and optimized to fit specific needs. Even greater fine tuning of the specific kinetics at each rate-limiting step is achievable with increasing/reducing the length of double strand hybridization or the introduction of mismatches at specific key positions. This high degree of flexibility with ease of construction allows for the engineering of nanoscale devices capable of performing highly varied complex tasks in a biological relevant milieu.

Offenlegungen

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank S. Douglas for extremely valuable discussions and advice, and all the members of the Bachelet lab for helpful discussions and work. This work is supported by grants from the Faculty of Life Sciences and Institute of Nanotechnology & Advanced Materials at Bar-Ilan University.

Materials

DNase/RNase free distilled water Gibco 10977
M13mp18 ssDNA scaffold NEB N4040S
10x TAE Gibco 15558-042
1 M MgCl2 Ambion AM9530G
Amicon Ultra 0.5 mL centrifugal filter 100K MWCO Amicon UFC510024
Agarose Promega V3125
TBE buffer Promega V4251
Ethidium bromide 10mg/ml solution  Sigma Aldrich E1510
1 kb DNA marker NEB N3232S
Loading Dye NEB B7021S
uranyl formate polysciences 24762
carbon-coated TEM grids  Science services EFCF400-Cu-50
Thermal Cycler c1000 Touch Bio-Rad
Glow Discharge K100X Emitech
UV table Gel Doc EZ Imager Bio-Rad
NanoDrop 2000c Thermo Scientific
TEM FEI-G12 Tecnai

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Amir, Y., Abu-Horowitz, A., Bachelet, I. Folding and Characterization of a Bio-responsive Robot from DNA Origami. J. Vis. Exp. (106), e51272, doi:10.3791/51272 (2015).

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