Xiao Rui
Liu
a,
Iong Ying
Loh
a,
Winna
Siti
a,
Hon Lin
Too
ab,
Tommy
Anderson
a and
Zhisong
Wang
*ab
aDepartment of Physics, National University of Singapore, 117542, Singapore. E-mail: phywangz@nus.edu.sg
bIntegrative Sciences and Engineering Programme, NUS Graduate School, National University of Singapore, 117542, Singapore
First published on 11th April 2023
Integrating rationally designed DNA molecular walkers and DNA origami platforms is a promising route towards advanced nano-robotics of diverse functions. Unleashing the full potential in this direction requires DNA walker–origami systems beyond the present simplistic bridge-burning designs for automated repeatable operation and scalable nano-robotic functions. Here we report such a DNA walker–origami system integrating an advanced light-powered DNA bipedal walker and a ∼170 nm-long rod-like DNA origami platform. This light-powered walker is fully qualified as a genuine translational molecular motor, and relies entirely on pure mechanical effects that are complicated by the origami surface but must be preserved for the walker's proper operation. This is made possible by tailor-designing the origami for optimal match with the walker to best preserve its core mechanics. A new fluorescence method is combined with site-controlled motility experiments to yield distinct and reliable signals for the walker's self-directed and processive motion despite origami-complicated fluorophore emission. The resultant integrated DNA walker–origami system provides a ‘seed’ system for future development of advanced light-powered DNA nano-robots (e.g., for scalable walker-automated chemical synthesis), and also truly bio-mimicking nano-muscles powered by genuine artificial translational molecular motors.
New conceptsA new conceptual line for developing advanced nano-robotics is the ‘marriage’ between the field of DNA molecular motors and the field of DNA origami, with the former for automated nanometres-resolved motility and the latter providing a submicroscale platform of rich designability and functionalizability. A conspicuous bottleneck for this line of development is a lack of integrated DNA origami–motor systems. Such systems must involve genuine molecular motors in order to attain the capability of automatic repeatable operation or collective motor action for amplified mechanical outputs and scalable robotic functions. The accumulated research in this direction, focusing on DNA walker–origami systems by far, has yet to fully break the bottleneck. This is because these reported systems involve either directionless or ‘bridge-burning’ DNA walkers that still fall short of genuine translational molecular motors by the strictest definition. Developing the bottleneck-breaking DNA origami–motor systems faces the challenge of engineering sophisticated molecular mechanics on DNA origami. This is a new regime to explore, especially for light-powered DNA origami–motor systems as their entire operation rely on pure mechanical effects. This study demonstrates such a light-operated DNA origami-translational motor system, thus opening a door to complex DNA-based nano-robotics and related developments, e.g., active materials. |
Advanced non-bridge-burning DNA walkers that are qualified as genuine translational molecular motors have been reported.19–31 Their integration with DNA origami, though crucial for advancing DNA-based nano-robotics, is not achieved yet. The reported bridge-burning DNA walker–origami systems rely on creating or introducing new DNA species on a track to ‘force’ a directional cascade. Such ‘brutal’ direction-rectifying mechanisms remain largely robust on origami. A non-bridge-burning DNA walker involves no track-modifying new species, and its direction on an invariable track arises from delicate molecular mechanical effects23,26,32–34 that can be complicated by an origami surface. Such an advanced walker often gains a net direction by mechanically amplifying a local asymmetry of a periodic track. This mechanical amplification ensures not only a walker's direction but also intra-walker coordination22,24 necessary for the walker's processive on-track motion, typically through fine-tuned free-energy gaps22,23,35 between walker-track binding states. Such a sophisticated mechanics-centred synergic rectification1,22,34 is sensitive to the track's small asymmetric features and the walker-track size match.23,24 It is non trivial to adapt the size-sensitive synergic rectification to a two-dimensional DNA origami surface from a one-dimensional straight track along a single DNA duplex or a single DNA strand (whence all the reported non-bridge-burning DNA walkers19–31 are developed; straight within a walker's size or a few times longer). This is because the origami surface has stronger electrostatic repulsion for a DNA walker, blocks half of its circumferential freedom on the track, and often does not allow the track's perfect straight longitudinal arrangement despite remarkable design freedom for the origami lattice. Therefore, the synergic mechanics and free-energy gaps critical for a non-bridge-burning walker become far more complicated on a DNA origami surface than on a single-duplex track. Enabling the origami-based synergic motor mechanics represents a new regime for engineering sophisticated molecular mechanics, especially for advanced light-operated DNA walker–origami systems that rely entirely on pure mechanical effects. Experimental exploration of this new molecular mechanics regime involves many technical details of a complex walker–origami system, and the challenging costly walker–origami co-optimization concerning assembly procedures, design parameters, operation conditions, etc.
In this study, we report a light-operated integrated DNA walker–origami system with its light-driven walker fully qualified as a genuine translational molecular motor. This DNA motor–origami system goes beyond bridge-burning designs, and operates automatically by light-activated mechanical effects. To our best knowledge, this is the first successful integration between DNA origami and genuine artificial DNA molecular motors. This is made possible by tailor-designing a new origami (rod-shaped, ∼170 nm-long) specifically for the walker, plus systematic optimization of the integrated walker-track system to best preserve the walker's core mechanics. A new fluorescence method is combined with site-controlled motility experiments to yield distinct and reliable signals for the walker's directional and processive motion despite complications of fluorophore emission from the origami surface. The resultant integrated DNA walker–origami system provides a ‘seed’ system for future development of advanced light-powered DNA nano-robots capable of repeated operation and diverse functions (e.g., for scalable walker-automated chemical synthesis36,37), and also bio-mimicking nano-muscles powered by genuine artificial translational molecular motors.
Fig. 1 DNA motor and origami. (A) and (B) The light-powered DNA motor (panel A) and its walking scheme (panel B, adapted from ref. 21; ‘bp’ for base pair, ‘nt’ for nucleotide; arrows for each strand pointing from 5′ and 3′; asterisks in D1* or D2* indicating nucleotide sequences complementary to that of D1 or D2). The bipedal motor carries azobenzene moieties in the legs for optical driving (in the 20 nt D2 segment, which is linked to the central duplex bridge via a 4 nt spacer for flexibility). The UV irradiation induces trans-to-cis photoisomerization of the azobenzenes to open the D2–D2* duplex for rear leg dissociation off the track while the front leg remains on the track due to the non-azo D1–D1* duplex (state II in panel B, rear or front leg relative to the motor's direction towards the track's plus end as indicated). The visible light induces the reverse cis-to-trans photoisomerization for the front leg's forward migration within a bi-overhang binding site (consisting of neighbouring D1* and D2* overhangs), and further for the forward binding of the dissociated leg (state III and IV). For the purpose of fluorescence detection, the motor carries two quenchers (BHQ2, see panel A), and the origami-based track is labelled by three types of dyes (TYE, ATTO488, ATTO647, represented by spheres of different colours in panel B, and tethered on D1* overhang or below D2* overhang via a nearby staple strand of the origami, see Fig. S1D, ESI†). (C) AFM images of the rod-shaped origami, yielding an average length of 169 nm for the origami (with a standard deviation of 5 nm). (D) The origami design, as shown by a schematic illustration (generated from Cadnano software) highlighting the origami's cross section and the two duplex lanes hosting D1* and D2* overhangs (i.e., track for the motor). (E) Realistic structure of the origami with six bi-overhang binding sites (generated from a simulation using oxView server). The periodic arrangement of D1* and D2* overhangs is shown; each D1* has a spacer at the bottom as indicated. |
The single-stranded D1* and D2* overhangs may be created on a DNA origami surface as protruding extension of staple strands that hybridize with a long scaffold strand to form the origami's main body. To support the motor's translational motion, these overhangs must be arranged in a linear periodic array on the origami lattice, ideally along a single duplex lane. However, the choice of location for these protruding overhangs is constrained by the two specific inter-overhang separations (15 bp and 75 bp) matching the size-sensitive motor, and further constrained by the origami lattice design that is limited by the origami's shape, stability, and fabrication quality. Under these constraints, replicating the motor's previous near perfect linear single-duplex track on a DNA origami is difficult, if not possible.
To match the light-powered DNA motor, a new rod-shaped DNA origami is specially designed and fabricated in this study (Fig. 1(C) and (D)). This origami accommodates a quasi-linear zigzag array of D1* and D2* overhangs along two neighbouring duplex lanes to best preserve the motor-track size match. Besides, the two track-hosting duplex lanes are above the origami's other duplex lanes to minimize their possible interference with the motor's operation. Specifically, the rod-like origami is made of 14 parallel helical lanes that are arranged in three overlapped hexagonal bundles (Fig. 1(D)). The two top duplex lanes in the central hexagonal bundle accommodate D2* and D1* overhangs, respectively. The D2* array and the D1* array both have the same 86 bp period that is close to the original duplex track period (90 bp). The adjacent D1* and D2* that form a binding site are now on different duplex lanes and are displaced by 18 bp along the longitudinal axis of the origami rod. The resultant intra-site D1*–D2* separation is larger than the original value of 15 bp for the previous single-duplex track. As a compensation, each staple strand for the D1* overhang contains an extra flexible spacer between the D1* segment and the scaffold-hybridizing segment, i.e., near the bottom of each D1* overhang (Fig. 1(E)). The spacer allows the adjacent D1* and D2* overhangs to get closer than the 18 bp gap for sake of the downhill D1*-to-D2* migration by the motor's leg, i.e., the transition from state II to state III in Fig. 1(B), which is crucial for the motor's plus-end-directed motion.
The detailed design and all the staple sequences for the origami are presented in Fig. S1 and Table S1 (ESI†). The origami's fabrication is elaborated in Methods. Fig. 1(C) shows the atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of the fabricated origami rod, which has a length of 169 nm ± 5 nm (see a typical length profile in Fig. S2, ESI† and length estimation in Methods). The fabricated origami has a reasonably good quality as reflected from the low length fluctuation (<3%), and also from the rather uniform shape of individual rods in the AFM images (Fig. 1(C)). Six binding sites are created in total on the ∼170 nm long origami rod, with Fig. 1(E) showing the realistic structure of the track-carrying origami generated from a simulation using the oxDNA server.41 The full 6-site track is ∼152 nm long from the first to last overhang along the longitudinal axis of the origami rod. This 6-site track and its truncated 5-site and 3-site variations are fabricated and used in this study for different scenarios of motility detection (see Fig. 2(A) for the different tracks).
Fig. 2 Three origami tracks (A) and two methods for site-specific motor introduction to the origami (B) and (C). The three tracks in panel A are truncated versions of the full 6-site track in Fig. 1(E). The three tracks are labelled with TYE dyes always at the middle site, but either with ATTO488 at the minus-end site and ATTO647 at the plus-end site (labelling scheme 1) or with the same two types of dyes at exchanged positions (labelling scheme 2). The average between the two labelling schemes yields the fluorescence signals in Fig. 3–5. The 5-site and 6-site tracks in panel A have one D1* replaced by a recruiter for site-specific motor introduction. For the same purpose, the motor is modified into a four-strand construction with a tail that can hybridize with a track's recruiter (panels B and C, state 1). For a motor with both legs covered by protector strands, the tail-recruiter hybridization ensures the site-selective motor–origami binding (state 2). The protector strands are removed by alternating UV-visible light irradiations, thus activating the motor's legs for binding with nearby overhang sites (state 3). The 23 nt-long tail has not only a recruiter-binding domain (17 nt long, highlighted by red colour) but also a 6 nt single-stranded toehold domain (highlighted in cyan) for the final motor release via a toehold-mediated strand displacement (state 4, produced by adding a 23 nt-long releasing strand that is complementary to the entire tail). The tail is introduced to the motor at two positions, leading to two methods for site-specific motor placement to the origami tracks. States 2–4 in panels B and C schematically illustrate the likely pathways for the two placement methods. The four-strand motor still has two identical legs that are now connected through an inverted DNA strand with a reverse a 5′–5′ linkage in the middle (highlighted by black sphere in state 1, panels B and C). |
For fluorescence detection of the motor's motion on the origami, a track is labelled with three types of dyes (TYE, ATTO488, ATTO647) at different sites, and the motor is labelled with two quenchers (BHQ2). The labelling schemes for the motor and tracks are shown in Fig. 1(A), (B) and 2(A). To fully report the motor's presence at a bi-overhang site, two identical dyes are used per site (represented by spheres of same colour in Fig. 1(B)), with the first dye tethered to the tip of D1* overhang and the second dye placed near the bottom of D2* overhang (tethered to a nearby staple strand without a protruding overhang, see Fig. S1D, ESI†). As shown in Fig. 1(B), this labelling scheme allows highly efficient contact quenching when the motor's quencher-labelled leg hybridizes with either D1* or D2* overhang.
In this study, we introduce a new fluorescence method that allows reliable conclusions on the motor's directional motion despite the origami-related complications. Specifically, we swap dyes between the minus-end and plus-end sites of an origami-based track and fabricate two sets of origami for the two labelling schemes, then conduct separate fluorescence experiments for the motor's operation using the two origami sets by the same amount at the same concentration. Finally, we do site-specific average between the two experiments to remove dye dependence. Namely, we average the fluorescence collected from the minus-end dyes in both experiments, and from the plus-end dyes in both experiments. This dual-experiment average is between two different types of dyes due to the dye swap, and is done not using the dye-dependent and site-sensitive absolute fluorescence intensity from each experiment but using each dye type's fluorescence normalized to its own value at the start of the motor's light operation. This site-specific average of the normalized fluorescence is the final operation-dependent fluorescence signal that is used to conclude whether the motor's direction of motion is towards the track's plus end or minus end. The resultant minus-end signal and plus-end signal both have a unity value at the start of the motor's operation, then diverge with a successively widening gap by cyclic light operation if the motor moves directionally on the track. This gap may be quantified as the minus-end signal minus the plus-end signal. If a motor is plus-end-directed (or minus-end-directed), this –/+ signal gap should be positive and increase (or negative and decrease) with more cycles of light operation despite abnormal behaviours of individual dyes (e.g., ATTO488 in Fig. S3, ESI†).
The conclusion on a motor's direction from the −/+ signal gap is not affected by the dye choice because this gap is a fluorescence difference for the same combination of two dye types (swapped between a track's plus-end and minus-end sites). The plus-end or minus-end signal is still affected by the photobleaching but on the equal footing, resulting in cancellation in the signal gap. Through the fluorescence normalization to its own initial value per site (before the dual-experiment average), the −/+ signal gap largely removes influence of the site-sensitive origami-based quenching. Therefore, the −/+ signal gap is a reliable indicator of on-origami motional direction of the light-powered DNA motor.
In this study, the new fluorescence method is further combined with different site-controlled motility experiments for distinct signals of the motor's on-origami directional motion. These motility experiments have different motor distributions before the start of light operation: the motor is initially distributed randomly on a 3-site track (by simple motor–origami mixing), or placed at the middle site of a 5-site track, or placed at the minus end of a 6-site track (by a site-selective procedure). As shown in Fig. 2(A), the three origami-based tracks are fabricated as truncated versions of the full 6-site track in Fig. 1(E). For sake of consistence, the three tracks have the same two dye types swapped between minus-end and plus-end sites (ATTO647, ATTO488), and the same third dye type for an intermediate site (TYE). The experimental methods for preparing the different motor distributions are schematically illustrated in Fig. 2(B) and (C), and explained in later sections and Methods. For sake of methodological optimization (especially for site-selective motor placement), three motor versions are fabricated and used for the motility experiments: one is the motor's original bi-strand design (see Fig. 1(A), for random-mix experiments), the other two are adapted four-strand designs (Fig. 2(B) and (C), for site-controlled experiments).
Fig. 3 Motility experiments of the motor on a 3-site origami track started from a random motor–origami mix (see track in Fig. 2(A), upper plot). (A)–(D) Fluorescence signal versus time for different spacer lengths below D1* overhangs (6 nt for panels (A and B), and 3 nt for panels (C and D). Along the time axis, the durations with data are the visible light irradiations and the gaps are the UV irradiations during which the fluorescence data are not collected. Each UV or visible light lasts 10 minutes. The signal gap between the minus and plus ends in panels B and D are extracted from the data in panels A and C, respectively (with the gap marked in panel A). The data are obtained at an origami–motor ratio of 1 for panels A and B and 2 for panels C and D, all at 8 nM origami concentration. (E) The signal gap at the end of 9 UV-visible light cycles versus the origami–motor ratio. The data in all the panels of this figure are obtained using the motor of bi-strand construction (as shown in Fig. 1(A)), except for the data represented by the bar with bold outline in panel E that are obtained using the motor of four-strand construction (as shown in Fig. 2(B), state 1) on the 3-site track with the 6 nt spacer below D1*. The similar signal gaps from the two motor versions indicate that they both work well on the origami. |
The −/+ signal gap shows different features when the flexible spacer below the D1* is 3 nt or 6 nt long. The gap for the 3 nt spacer keeps rising linearly over the 9 UV-visible light cycles (Fig. 3(D)), whilst the gap for the 6 nt spacer rises first and saturates after the 6th cycle (Fig. 3(C)). The final gap after the 9 cycles is roughly comparable between the 3 nt and 6 nt spacers for origami–motor ratio of 1.55 and 2, but is apparently bigger for the 6 nt spacer for equal origami–motor ratio (Fig. 3(E)). This suggests that both spacer lengths are ok to facilitate the motor's directional motion on the origami rod though the longer 6 nt spacer is slightly better. Nevertheless, entirely deleting the spacer results in near zero gap (Fig. S5, ESI†), indicating necessity of a finite spacer below the short D1* overhang for the motor's on-origami operation.
The fluorescence method in this study differs from a control-based method24–28,30 in previous studies of DNA motors on short single-duplex tracks. For these minimal DNA tracks labelled with fluorescent dyes, the quenching is dominated by the motor-carried quenchers, and the track-only control typically exhibits a monotonic fluorescence decrease (often minor) due to photobleaching even for light-powered DNA motors24,25,27,28,30 (including the present one, see ref. 24). A dye's fluorescence from an operated motor-track mix divided by the fluorescence from the track-only control largely removes the influence of photobleaching and dye dependence, and allows a reasonable estimation of the motor's on-track population. This control-calibrated signal typically shows monotonic increase (or decrease) for a track's minus end (or plus end) for a plus-end-directed motor. The control-based method is not applicable to the present study considering the non-monotonic and even abnormal rising fluorescence from the track-only control (Fig. S3, ESI†). The new method is control-free as the final −/+ signal gap is determined from operation experiments alone. The dye swap further removes the influence of dye choice from the −/+ signal gap. Therefore, the new fluorescence method likely provides a general method for reliable direction detection for complex DNA walker–origami systems, especially light-powered ones. Nevertheless, we should point out that this method likely underestimates on-origami translocation of the present motor as the serious pre-existent origami-induced quenching competes with the motor-carried quenchers to reduce a dye's effectiveness for reporting the motor's motion. We also note that the previous control-based fluorescence method without the dye swap might still work for DNA walker–origami systems powered not by light but by other means (e.g., chemical fuels, hence free of complicated dynamic interplay from alternating UV-visible light operations).
The necessity of dye swap, which is crucial for the new fluorescence method, can be further clarified by examining emission patterns of individual dyes from operation experiments. As an example, Fig. S4A and C (ESI†) presents the normalized fluorescence for each dye that is used to calculate the swap-based average fluorescence signals in Fig. 3(A) and (B). The normalized fluorescence for a minus-end dye or a plus-end dye is still affected by the operation-induced photobleaching and its dynamic interplay with the origami-induced quenching, and may have abnormal temporal patterns. For example, a slight fluorescence decrease for a minus-end dye is possible even for this plus-end-directed motor due to the photobleaching effect, as shown in Fig. S4C (ESI†). A slight abnormal fluorescence increase for a plus-end dye is possible too as shown in Fig. S4C (ESI†). These dye behaviours prevent unambiguous determination of the motor's direction. Furthermore, the opposite fluorescence trends for the minus and plus ends emerge for the same motor by swapping the dyes between the two sites (see Fig. S4A versus Fig. S4C, ESI†), indicating a dye dependence. To remove this dye dependence, we average the normalized fluorescence from the two minus-end dyes and also average the normalized fluorescence from the two plus-end dyes. The two averaged signals, one for the track's minus end and one for the plus end as shown in Fig. 3(A), are from the same two dyes due to the dye swap. Hence the gap between the two averaged signals, i.e., the −/+ signal gap, is independent of the dye choice and reflects the motor's direction reliably. If the −/+ signal gap is above zero and accumulates over the cycles of light irradiations, the motor moves from the minus end to the plus end. Such a neat fluorescence pattern is observed throughout this study, with two examples shown in Fig. 3(B) and (D). Besides, the signals from the swap-based average clearly rises during each UV light and drops during each visible light (Fig. 3(A) and (C)). This periodic rise-drop pattern matches the motor's response to the light operation, namely UV-induced leg dissociation (e.g., state I to II in Fig. 1(B)) and the visible-light-restored leg binding (state III to IV in Fig. 1(B)). Hence these signals originate unambiguously from the motor's light-powered motility on the origami.
Fig. 4 Motility experiments of the motor started from the middle of a 5-site origami track (A) and (B) or from the minus end of a 6-site track (C) and (D). The two tracks are illustrated in Fig. 2(A) (middle and lower plots). The UV-visible light operation is the same as for Fig. 3. The data in panels A and B are obtained under the same condition but using different tails for site-specific motor introduction (as shown in Fig. 2(B) and (C)). The data in panels C and D are obtained for Tail 1 for different spacer lengths below D1* (as indicated; 6 nt spacer for panels A and B). All the data in this figure are obtained using protector 1 at 8 nM origami concentration (for origami–motor ratio 2 for panels A–C and 1 for panel D). |
The mid-site signal also changes from the monotonic increase for the mid-site start to an initial drop followed by a recovering rise for the minus-end start. This V-shaped drop-rise pattern becomes clearer when the number of operation cycles is increased from 9 to 12 (from Fig. 4(C)–(D); for the same UV duration and visible light duration per cycle). This V-shaped pattern is rather common for the minus-end start experiments for multiple variations of the preparation procedure (Fig. 5). Notably, the V-shaped pattern is more apparent when the −/+ signal gap is bigger (see Fig. 5(A) (C)–(E)), and disappears for small −/+ signal gaps (Fig. 5(B) (F)). The drop-rise pattern of the mid-site signal plus its positive correlation with the motor's directional signal (i.e., the −/+ signal gap) suggests that the motor starting from the minus end arrives at the mid-site first (hence initial drop of its signal), then passes it towards the plus end (hence later recovery of the mid-site signal). In other words, this is a processive motor that translocates itself along the 6-site track from the minus end to the plus end through the middle site. Indeed, the motor in the minus-end start experiments makes three or four consecutive steps (∼29 nm each) to produce the plus-end signal drop shown in Fig. 4(C) and (D) (three or four steps depending on the motor introduction schemes as shown in Fig. 2(B) and (C)). This finding of motor processivity is consistent with an early experimental finding23,24 that the motor possesses two directional biases, i.e., selective rear leg dissociation under UV (from state I to II in Fig. 1(B)), and forward binding of the dissociated leg under visible light (state III to IV). The two biases combine to ensure43,44 the motor's inter-leg coordination for processive hand-over-hand on-track walking.
Fig. 5 Motility experiments of the motor started from the minus end of a 6-site track under different combinations of tail, protector, and spacer length under D1* (as indicated). The track is illustrated in Fig. 2(A) (lower plot). All the data in this figure are obtained at 8 nM origami concentration for origami–motor ratio 2. |
This study thus crosses an important scientific threshold for DNA origami-based nano-robotics. This scientific progress delivers new technological capabilities. Due to the thermodynamically less advanced motion control, the bridge-burning DNA walker–origami systems have serious technological limitations for nano-robotic applications, e.g., lack of repeatable automatic operation. Integration of DNA origami and genuine DNA translational molecular motors is necessary to overcome these limitations for advanced DNA nano-robotics, but faces the challenge of engineering sophisticated mechanics-centered control of molecular motion on DNA origami. This bottleneck is now broken by this study.
Specifically, the key for the present motor's control of direction is to adjust the motor's size (e.g., central duplex bridge) to fine-tune the free-energy hierarchy of the motor's inter-site binding states towards an asymmetric ground state (state I in Fig. 1(B)), in which the bipedal motor has one leg bound with the D2* overhang of a site and the other leg bound with the D1* of a front site. Thus, only the rear leg is selectively dissociated by the UV light (state II in Fig. 1(B)), though the two identical legs have equal chance for UV-induced trans-to-cis photoisomerization for their azo-carrying D2 segments. Under the visible light, both legs again have equal chance for cis-to-trans photoisomerization to recover their hybridization ability. When the recovery is earlier for the front leg than the dissociated leg, the front leg undergoes a downhill intra-site migration from the D1* to D2* overhang to bias the dissociated leg for its forward binding to the front site (state III to state IV in Fig. 1(B)). Then this round of UV/visible light irradiations produces a full forward step for the motor. When the recovery of hybridization ability is earlier for the dissociated leg, it binds backward before the front leg's migration, resulting in a futile step. In both scenarios, the asymmetric inter-site state is resumed with the motor's center of mass either displaced forward or recovered, but not displaced backward (hence a ratchet effect). The resumed asymmetric state makes the motor ready for a new forward-stepping attempt when another round of UV-visible light is applied. The same stepping cycle will occur between any three identical bi-overhang sites as shown in Fig. 1(B), resulting in the motor's processive steps on any longer track towards the same direction (i.e., plus end of the track). As found in ref. 24, the motor under the visible light actually has more than 50% chance for forward binding despite the equal chance of visible light-induced photoisomerization for both legs. This is because the front leg's intra-site migration is local (over a small distance of ∼18 bp) and faster than the other leg's inter-site backward binding (over a distance of ∼68 bp). Although quantifying the binding bias is not possible in this study (due to the control-free fluorescence method that loses the motor's on-track population), there are signs of suppressed backward binding, e.g., from the minus-end start experiments (Fig. 4(C) and (D)). The motor's backward binding to the starting site (minus end) is signaled by the fluorescence drop during a visible light immediate after a UV-induced fluorescence rise. However, the minus-end fluorescence in Fig. 4(C) and (D) shows minimal drop, and sometimes a flat or even rising pattern.
In this study, we tailor-design a new DNA origami for the optimal motor-track size match from the previous studies.23,24 This largely preserves the mechanics-centered control of the motor's motion as reflected from the origami-based motility experiments. In particular, the random-mix experiments start from the equilibrated motor distribution on the 3-site origami track (prepared by long incubation of motor–origami mix), but result in a non-equilibrium distribution with surplus motor accumulation at the plus-end site by pure light operation of the motor–origami system. This is a direct experimental evidence for the present DNA walker–origami system meeting the strictest standard of genuine molecular motors.
In this study, the experimental procedure for the motor's site-controlled introduction is designed based on two adapted motor constructions, as elaborated below. To avoid the motor's uncontrolled binding to the track's identical sites, the motor is pre-annealed with a protector strand to cover both legs, and the protected motor is guided to the target site (minus-end or middle site) via a recruiter overhang that is just the D1* overhang of the target site but elongated (to 17 nt) and mutated into a new sequence (see Fig. 2(A) for 5-site and 6-site tracks with the recruiter). The recruiter recognizes and captures the motor by hybridizing with a tail overhang (23 nt long) that is introduced to the motor at one end or between the two legs (called tail 1 and tail 2, as illustrated in state 1, Fig. 2(B) and (C)). To accommodate the tail, the motor is adjusted from its original bi-strand construction (see Fig. 1(A), for random-mix experiments of this study) into two four-strand constructions for the site-specific experiments (see state 1, Fig. 2(B) and (C); working equally well on the origami tracks as the bi-strand version as indicated by the data in Fig. 3(E)). After the tail-guided motor-recruiter binding (state 2, Fig. 2(B) and (C)), alternating UV and visible light irradiations are applied to activate the motor for binding the two nearby sites (state 3). This is because the UV light dissociates the protector into the bulk solution and the exposed legs bind the nearby sites. The activated motor is finally released from the origami-bound recruiter by a 23 nt-long release strand that breaks the 17 bp recruiter-tail duplex by forming a 23 bp duplex with the tail (state 4). Now the motor is ready for on-track motion under a new series of alternating UV and visible light.
The motor introduction procedure is tested and optimized rather extensively for the two motor tails and four types of protector strands. The motor's final settlement on the origami tracks has different pathways for the two tails due to their different location on the motor. As shown in Fig. 2(B), the tail 1 places the motor into a state in which the motor's two legs bind the two D2* overhangs, likely incompletely, on both sides of the recruiter. This state is accessible to the motor as found in previous studies,24 and readily evolves into the walking mode by UV-induced dissociation of either leg. The simultaneous dissociation of both legs is not impossible but the chance is low due to the modest UV intensity21 used in this study. The tail 2 places the motor from a recruiter towards either the plus end or minus end of the track. The motor adopts the symmetric state in the latter case. In the former case, as shown in Fig. 2(C), the motor adopts the most desired asymmetric state for on-track walking (i.e., the state in Fig. 1(B), top plot, ready for selective rear leg dissociation under the UV light). For the four types of protector strands, the protector 1 and 2 are 15 nt long and cover incompletely the leg's 20 nt-long D2 segment with its 5 nt-long exposure near 5′ end and 3′, respectively; the protector 3 is 20 nt long to cover the full D2 segment, and the protector 4 is 25 nt long to further cover the whole leg (D2 plus 5 nt-long D1). For sake of effective dissociation by light irradiations, protector 4 is not entirely complementary to the leg, with a point mutation every 5 nucleotides.
Fig. 5 present more fluorescence data from the minus-end start experiments for different combinations of tail types and protector types. Fig. 6 is a summary of the −/+ signal gap for a broader comparison covering both the minus-end start and mid-site start experiments. If both experiments have a similar level of motor translocation from the initial site to the plus end, the −/+ signal gap for the minus-end start should be two times that for the mid-site start. This expectation matches the data roughly (see Fig. 6(A)versusFig. 6(B)). Tail 1 and tail 2 both work well for the protector 1, 2, and 3, with the −/+ signal gap comparable for the protector 1 and protector 2 (Fig. 5(A)–(D) and 6(A)) and slightly larger for the protector 3 (Fig. 5(E) and 6(B)). For the minus-end start experiments, these tail-protector combinations all lead to signal gaps apparently larger than those from the random-mix experiments despite the shorter track for the latter experiments (see Fig. 5versusFig. 3). This is consistent with the success of site-controlled motor placement. However, the longest protector 4 leads to the −/+ signal gaps for the minus-end start experiments as small as for the random-mix experiments (Fig. 5(F)versusFig. 3(C) and (D)). This implies failure of the protector 4 to protect the motor's legs, probably because the protector-leg duplex is not stable enough due to the 4 mutations in this protector.
Fig. 6 (A) Effectiveness of site-specific motor introduction (as assessed by fluorescence signal gap between minus and plus ends) for key parameters of the motor placement procedure (shown in Fig. 2(C) and (D)). (A) Motor introduction to the middle site of a 5-site track (as shown in Fig. 2(A), middle plot). All data in this histogram plot are obtained for 6 nt spacer below D1*, and with the motor activated for leg-site binding by 6 cycles of alternating UV and visible light (10 minutes per UV and 5 minutes per visible light, except for the leftmost two bars for 30 minutes per UV). (B) Motor introduction to the minus-end site of a 6-site track (as shown in Fig. 2(A), lowest plot). All data in this histogram plot are obtained using the 1 hour motor-recruiter binding time followed by the 6 light cycles for motor activation (10 minutes per UV and 5 minutes per visible light), except for the rightmost 3 bars (by a single 60 minutes UV and a 20 minutes visible light for motor activation). For both histogram plots in this figure, the −/+ signal gap is obtained at the end of 13 cycles of alternating UV-visible light operation (10 minutes per UV, 10 minutes per visible light) after the motor's release for on-track motion (all for origami–motor ratio 2, except ratio 1 for dotted bars in panel B and 10-cycle light operation for the leftmost 2 bars in the same panel). |
Like the random-mix experiments, the site-specific motor placement works for both 3 nt and 6 nt spacers under the D1* overhangs (see Fig. 6(B)versusFig. 3(E)). For some tail-protector combinations, the divergence between the minus-end and plus-end signals occurs later for the 3 nt spacer than for the 6 nt spacer (Fig. 5(B) and (F)). This difference between the spacers is also observed in the random-mix experiments (Fig. 3(A) and (C)), and results in different patterns for the −/+ signal gap (Fig. 3(B) and (D)). Changing the origami–motor molar ratio slightly changes the −/+ signal gap for the minus-end start experiments (Fig. 6(B)), again similar to the random-mix experiments (Fig. 3(E)). For origami–motor ratio 2, the 3 nt spacer leads to a rather big −/+ signal gap for a random-mix experiment (Fig. 2(E)), and for a minus-end start experiment (Fig. 5(E) for tail 1 and protector 3). In the latter experiment, the big signal gap coincides with a particularly apparent V-shape pattern of the mid-site signal, and even the plus-end signal starts to show a mild V-shape pattern after 10 cycles of UV-visible light, probably due to saturated motor accumulation at the plus end and ensuing motor derailment by further light operation. When the optical activation of the motor for leg-site binding is changed from multiple UV-visible light cycles to a single cycle of elongated UV followed by visible light, the −/+ signal gap drops slightly, suggesting less effective minus-end placement (Fig. 6(B)). Elongating the motor-recruiter binding time from 1 hour to 12 hour does not improve the −/+ signal gap; it slightly drops instead (Fig. 6(A)).
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2nh00565d |
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