Litcius/Paper detail

DNA Origami as Emerging Technology for the Engineering of Fluorescent and Plasmonic-Based Biosensors

Morgane Loretan, Ivana Domljanovic, M. Lakatos, Curzio Rüegg, Guillermo P. Acuna

2020Materials50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

DNA nanotechnology is a powerful and promising tool for the development of nanoscale devices for numerous and diverse applications. One of the greatest potential fields of application for DNA nanotechnology is in biomedicine, in particular biosensing. Thanks to the control over their size, shape, and fabrication, DNA origami represents a unique opportunity to assemble dynamic and complex devices with precise and predictable structural characteristics. Combined with the addressability and flexibility of the chemistry for DNA functionalization, DNA origami allows the precise design of sensors capable of detecting a large range of different targets, encompassing RNA, DNA, proteins, small molecules, or changes in physico-chemical parameters, that could serve as diagnostic tools. Here, we review some recent, salient developments in DNA origami-based sensors centered on optical detection methods (readout) with a special emphasis on the sensitivity, the selectivity, and response time. We also discuss challenges that still need to be addressed before this approach can be translated into robust diagnostic devices for bio-medical applications.

Topics & Concepts

NanotechnologyDNA origamiBiosensorDNA nanotechnologyFlexibility (engineering)BiomedicineDNAComputer scienceMaterials scienceChemistryBiologyBioinformaticsNanostructureMathematicsBiochemistryStatisticsAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon ResearchRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
DNA Origami as Emerging Technology for the Engineering of Fluorescent and Plasmonic-Based Biosensors | Litcius