Abstract
A major goal of nanotechnology and bioengineering is to build artificial nanomachines capable of generating specific membrane curvatures on demand. Inspired by natural membrane-deforming proteins, we designed DNA-origami curls that polymerize into nanosprings and show their efficacy in vesicle deformation. DNA-coated membrane tubules emerge from spherical vesicles when DNA-origami polymerization or high membrane-surface coverage occurs. Unlike many previous methods, the DNA self-assembly-mediated membrane tubulation eliminates the need for detergents or top-down manipulation. The DNA-origami design and deformation conditions have substantial influence on the tubulation efficiency and tube morphology, underscoring the intricate interplay between lipid bilayers and vesicle-deforming DNA structures.
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Grome, M. W., Zhang, Z., Pincet, F., & Lin, C. (2018). Vesicle Tubulation with Self-Assembling DNA Nanosprings. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 57(19), 5330–5334. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201800141
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