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From Proteopedia
Engineering Crystals with Tunable Symmetries from 14- or 16-Base-Long DNA Strands
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedSequence-selective recognition of DNA duplexes is important for a wide range of applications including regulating gene expression, drug development, and genome editing. Many small molecules can bind DNA duplexes with sequence selectivity. It remains as a challenge how to reliably and conveniently obtain the detailed structural information on DNA-molecule interactions because such information is critically needed for understanding the underlying rules of DNA-molecule interactions. If those rules were understood, we could design molecules to recognize DNA duplexes with a sequence preference and intervene in related biological processes, such as disease treatment. Here, we have demonstrated that DNA crystal engineering is a potential solution. A molecule-binding DNA sequence is engineered to self-assemble into highly ordered DNA crystals. An X-ray crystallographic study of molecule-DNA cocrystals reveals the structural details on how the molecule interacts with the DNA duplex. In this approach, the DNA will serve two functions: (1) being part of the molecule to be studied and (2) forming the crystal lattice. It is conceivable that this method will be a general method for studying drug/peptide-DNA interactions. The resulting DNA crystals may also find use as separation matrices, as hosts for catalysts, and as media for material storage. Engineering DNA Crystals toward Studying DNA-Guest Molecule Interactions.,Zhang C, Zhao J, Lu B, Seeman NC, Sha R, Noinaj N, Mao C J Am Chem Soc. 2023 Mar 1;145(8):4853-4859. doi: 10.1021/jacs.3c00081. Epub 2023 , Feb 15. PMID:36791277[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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Categories: Large Structures | Synthetic construct | Lu B | Mao C | Noinaj N | Seeman NC | Sha R | Zhang C | Zhao J