Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems

abstract: DNA and RNA are generally regarded as one of the central molecules in molecular biology. Recent advancements in the field of DNA/RNA nanotechnology witnessed the success of usage of DNA/RNA as programmable molecules to construct nano-objects with predefined shapes and dynamic molecular mac...

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Other Authors: Hong, Fan (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53645
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-53645
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-536452019-05-16T03:01:31Z Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems abstract: DNA and RNA are generally regarded as one of the central molecules in molecular biology. Recent advancements in the field of DNA/RNA nanotechnology witnessed the success of usage of DNA/RNA as programmable molecules to construct nano-objects with predefined shapes and dynamic molecular machines for various functions. From the perspective of structural design with nucleic acid, there are basically two types of assembly method, DNA tile based assembly and DNA origami based assembly, used to construct infinite-sized crystal structures and finite-sized molecular structures. The assembled structure can be used for arrangement of other molecules or nanoparticles with the resolution of nanometers to create new type of materials. The dynamic nucleic acid machine is based on the DNA strand displacement, which allows two nucleic acid strands to hybridize with each other to displace one or more prehybridized strands in the process. Strand displacement reaction has been implemented to construct a variety of dynamic molecular systems, such as molecular computer, oscillators, in vivo devices for gene expression control. This thesis will focus on the computational design of structural and dynamic nucleic acid systems, particularly for new type of DNA structure design and high precision control of gene expression in vivo. Firstly, a new type of fundamental DNA structural motif, the layered-crossover motif, will be introduced. The layered-crossover allow non-parallel alignment of DNA helices with precisely controlled angle. By using the layered-crossover motif, the scaffold can go through the 3D framework DNA origami structures. The properties of precise angle control of the layered-crossover tiles can also be used to assemble 2D and 3D crystals. One the dynamic control part, a de-novo-designed riboregulator is developed that can recognize single nucleotide variation. The riboregulators can also be used to develop paper-based diagnostic devices. Dissertation/Thesis Hong, Fan (Author) Yan, Hao (Advisor) Liu, Yan (Advisor) Green, Alexander A. (Committee member) Borges, Chad (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemistry DNA nanotechnology Molecular diagnostic Molecular programming RNA synthetic biology Self-assembly eng 310 pages Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53645 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Chemistry
DNA nanotechnology
Molecular diagnostic
Molecular programming
RNA synthetic biology
Self-assembly
spellingShingle Chemistry
DNA nanotechnology
Molecular diagnostic
Molecular programming
RNA synthetic biology
Self-assembly
Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
description abstract: DNA and RNA are generally regarded as one of the central molecules in molecular biology. Recent advancements in the field of DNA/RNA nanotechnology witnessed the success of usage of DNA/RNA as programmable molecules to construct nano-objects with predefined shapes and dynamic molecular machines for various functions. From the perspective of structural design with nucleic acid, there are basically two types of assembly method, DNA tile based assembly and DNA origami based assembly, used to construct infinite-sized crystal structures and finite-sized molecular structures. The assembled structure can be used for arrangement of other molecules or nanoparticles with the resolution of nanometers to create new type of materials. The dynamic nucleic acid machine is based on the DNA strand displacement, which allows two nucleic acid strands to hybridize with each other to displace one or more prehybridized strands in the process. Strand displacement reaction has been implemented to construct a variety of dynamic molecular systems, such as molecular computer, oscillators, in vivo devices for gene expression control. This thesis will focus on the computational design of structural and dynamic nucleic acid systems, particularly for new type of DNA structure design and high precision control of gene expression in vivo. Firstly, a new type of fundamental DNA structural motif, the layered-crossover motif, will be introduced. The layered-crossover allow non-parallel alignment of DNA helices with precisely controlled angle. By using the layered-crossover motif, the scaffold can go through the 3D framework DNA origami structures. The properties of precise angle control of the layered-crossover tiles can also be used to assemble 2D and 3D crystals. One the dynamic control part, a de-novo-designed riboregulator is developed that can recognize single nucleotide variation. The riboregulators can also be used to develop paper-based diagnostic devices. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2019
author2 Hong, Fan (Author)
author_facet Hong, Fan (Author)
title Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
title_short Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
title_full Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
title_fullStr Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
title_full_unstemmed Computational Design and Study of Structural and Dynamic Nucleic Acid Systems
title_sort computational design and study of structural and dynamic nucleic acid systems
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53645
_version_ 1719183428472012800