A general approach to DNA-programmable atom equivalents
Chuan Zhang,Robert J. Macfarlane,Kaylie L. Young,Chung Hang J. Choi,Liangliang Hao,Evelyn Auyeung,Guoliang Liu,Xiaozhu Zhou& Chad A. Mirkin
Nanoparticles can be combined with nucleic acids to programme the
formation of three-dimensional colloidal crystals where the particles’
size, shape, composition and position can be independently controlled1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.
However, the diversity of the types of material that can be used is
limited by the lack of a general method for preparing the basic
DNA-functionalized building blocks needed to bond nanoparticles of
different chemical compositions into lattices in a controllable manner.
Here we show that by coating nanoparticles protected with aliphatic
ligands with an azide-bearing amphiphilic polymer, followed by the
coupling of DNA to the polymer using strain-promoted azide–alkyne
cycloaddition8
(also known as copper-free azide–alkyne click chemistry), nanoparticles
bearing a high-density shell of nucleic acids can be created regardless
of nanoparticle composition. This method provides a route to a
virtually endless class of programmable atom equivalents for DNA-based
colloidal crystallization.