Article, 2024

Self-Assembly of Ultrasmall 3D Architectures of (l)‑Acyclic Threoninol Nucleic Acids with High Thermal and Serum Stability

Journal of the American Chemical Society, ISSN 0002-7863, 1520-5126, 10.1021/jacs.4c04919

Contributors

Skaanning, Mads Koch [1] Bønnelykke, Jonas 0000-0001-8716-1963 [1] Nijenhuis, Minke Anne Door 0000-0002-1872-5056 [1] Samanta, Anirban [1] Smidt, Jakob Melgaard [1] Gothelf, Kurt Vesterager 0000-0003-2399-3757 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The primary challenge of implementing DNA nanostructures in biomedical applications lies in their vulnerability to nuclease degradation and variations in ionic strength. Furthermore, the size minimization of DNA and RNA nanostructures is limited by the stability of the DNA and RNA duplexes. This study presents a solution to these problems through the use of acyclic (l)-threoninol nucleic acid (aTNA), an artificial acyclic nucleic acid, which offers enhanced resilience under physiological conditions. The high stability of homo aTNA duplexes enables the design of durable nanostructures with dimensions below 5 nm, previously unattainable due to the inherent instability of DNA structures. The assembly of a stable aTNA-based 3D cube and pyramid that involves an i-motif formation is demonstrated. In particular, the cube outperforms its DNA-based counterparts in terms of stability. We furthermore demonstrate the successful attachment of a nanobody to the aTNA cube using the favorable triplex formation of aTNA with ssDNA. The selective in vitro binding capability to human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 is demonstrated. The presented research presents the use of aTNA for the creation of smaller durable nanostructures for future medical applications. It also introduces a new method for attaching payloads to these structures, enhancing their utility in targeted therapies.

Keywords

DNA, DNA nanostructures, DNA structure, RNA, RNA duplexes, RNA nanostructures, acid, applications, assembly, attachment, biomedical applications, conditions, counterparts, creation, cube, degradation, design, dimensions, duplex, enhance resilience, epidermal growth factor receptor 2, formation, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, i-motif, i-motif formation, instability, ionic strength, medical applications, method, nanobodies, nanostructures, nuclease degradation, nucleic acids, payload, physiological conditions, problem, pyramid, receptor 2, research, resilience, self-assembly, serum, serum stability, size, size minimization, solution, ssDNA, stability, strength, structure, study, targeted therapy, therapy, thermally, variation, vulnerability

Funders

  • Novo Nordisk Foundation

Data Provider: Digital Science