The inherent specificity of DNA sequence hybridization has been extensively exploited to develop bioengineering applications. Nevertheless, the structural potential of DNA has been far less explored for creating non-canonical DNA-based reactions. Here we develop a DNA origami-enabled highly localized metallization reaction for intrinsic metallization patterning with 10-nm resolution. Both theoretical and experimental studies reveal that low-valence metal ions (Cu2+ and Ag+) strongly coordinate with DNA bases in protruding clustered DNA (pcDNA) prescribed on two-dimensional DNA origami, which results in effective attraction within flexible pcDNA strands for site-specific pcDNA condensation. We find that the metallization reactions occur selectively on prescribed sites while not on origami substrates. This strategy is generically applicable for free-style metal painting of alphabet letters, digits and geometric shapes on all−DNA substrates with near-unity efficiency. We have further fabricated single- and double-layer nanoscale printed circuit board (nano-PCB) mimics, shedding light on bio-inspired fabrication for nanoelectronic and nanophotonic applications.
CITATION STYLE
Jia, S., Wang, J., Xie, M., Sun, J., Liu, H., Zhang, Y., … Fan, C. (2019). Programming DNA origami patterning with non-canonical DNA-based metallization reactions. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13507-5
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